Originator and recipient based transmissions in wireless communications

ABSTRACT

Methods and systems are described for determining a plurality of transmission levels for, e.g., a plurality of time-frequency channels and/or a plurality of tones. The transmission levels may be determined by a first node based on, for example, a received transmission from a second node. The first node may generate a signal, which may be based on, for example, an originator-based pseudorandom sequence, a recipient-based pseudorandom sequence, and/or a complex sinusoid. The first node may transmit the signal as an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) transmission.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S.patent application Ser. No. 14/480,542, filed Sep. 8, 2014, which is acontinuation of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No.14/309,332, filed Jun. 19, 2014, which is a continuation of and claimspriority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/010,629, filed Jan. 20,2011, which is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 11/880,825, filed Jul. 23, 2007, issued as U.S.Pat. No. 8,363,744 on Jan. 29, 2013, which is a continuation-in-part ofand claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/878,789,filed Jun. 10, 2001, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,248,841 on Jul. 24, 2007,each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety forall purposes. Also, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/878,789 is anon-provisional of and claims priority to U.S. Provisional PatentApplication Ser. No. 60/211,462, filed Jun. 13, 2000, and to U.S.Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/243,831, filed Oct. 27, 2000.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to MIMO devices, and more particularly toMIMO devices capable of being utilized in point-to-multipoint and meshnetworks.

BACKGROUND

The field of wireless communication networks has challenged implementerswith continuously discovered synergies, both positive and negative. Thesea of signaling has long grown from scattered and isolated sparks ofMorse code to the modern-day roar of intermingling transmissions. Thesimplicity of the directional link (Point to Point) was replaced by thebroadcast (Point to Multipoint) and is being replaced by the mesh(Multipoint to Multipoint) and even the relaying, multi-hop, interactivemesh; also, the continuous-transmission format is being replaced byshort and varying packets. The complexities of variations in real worldconditions—constantly changing topography, overlapping wave signals, andunpredictable and intermittent faults or blockages—all challenge theexisting methods and systems. Further description of some of theseproblems are discussed as follows.

Wireless electromagnetic communication networks both enable competitiveaccess to fixed link networks, whether they employ fiber, optical, oreven copper lines, and provide a competitive alternative (such aslinking computers in a WAN, or multiple appliances in an infrarednetwork). The demand for high signal content capacity (above 1 to 2MB/second) has increased dramatically in the last few years due to bothtelecommunications deregulation and the new service opportunitiespresented by the Internet.

Originally, wireless communication was either single-station tosingle-station (also known as point-to-point, PTP), or single-station tomultiple station (also known as point-to-multiple-point, or PMP). PTPcommunication generally presumed equal capabilities at each end of thelink; PMP communication usually presumed greater capabilities at thesingle core point than at any of the penumbral multiple points itcommunicated with. The topology of any PTP network was a disconnectedset of linear links (FIG. 1); the topology of a PMP network was a ‘star’or ‘hub and spoke’ (FIG. 2).

As the price for more complex hardware has declined and capabilityincreased, PMP is winning over PTP. For economic reasons, a wirelesselectromagnetic communication network's nodes, or transceivers, usuallyvary in capacity. Most such wireless electromagnetic communicationnetworks have a core hierarchy of Base Stations (BS), each comprising amultiplicity of sector antennae spatially separated in a knownconfiguration, and a penumbral cloud of individual subscriber units(SU). If each BS communicates over a different frequency, then each SUmust either have a tuned receiver for each station to which thesubscriber tunes or, more commonly, a tunable receiver capable ofreaching the range of frequencies encompassing those BSs to which itsubscribes. (FIG. 3 shows two BSs and six SUs, four of whom subscribe toeach BS, with different frequencies indicated in 3A and 3B.)

To increase the coverage in a given geographical area, PMP networks aretypically deployed in multiple cells over the total service area of thenetwork, with each SU linked to a single BS at a time except (in somemobile communication instantiations) during handoff intervals when it istransitioning from one cell to another. Although these cells arenominally non-overlapping, in reality emissions contained within onecell easily and typically propagate to adjacent cells, creating newproblems of interference, as one cell's signal became noise to all othersurrounding cells (intercell interference).

A number of different topologies (driven somewhat by the technology, andsomewhat by the geography of the area in which the network existed),have been developed, including ring networks, both open and closed, andmesh networks. These efforts tried to maximize the coverage and clarityfor the network as a whole, while minimizing the number of BS locations,minimizing BS complexity (and thus cost), and minimizing SU complexity(and thus cost).

The inherently multipoint nature of wireless communication networks,i.e., their ability to arbitrarily and flexibly connect multipleorigination and destination nodes, has spawned a growing demand formethods and apparatus that will enable each particular wirelesselectromagnetic communication network to exploit their particular partof the spectrum and geography in constantly-changing and unpredictableeconomic and financial environments. Efficient use of both capacity andavailable power for a network, for a particular constraint set offrequencies, power, and hardware, is more in demand than ever as thecompetitive field and available spectrum grows more and more crowded.

The prior art includes many schemes for maximizing signal clarity andminimizing interference between nodes in a complex, multipointenvironment. These include differentiation by: (a) Frequency channels;(b) time slots; (c) code spreading; and (d) spatial separation.

First generation systems (e.g. AMPS, NORDIC) developed for cellularmobile radio systems (CMRS) provide frequency-division multiple access(FDMA) communication between a BS and multiple SUs, by allowing each SUto communicate with the BS on only one of several non-overlappingfrequency channels covering the spectrum available to the system. Thisapproach allows each SU to ‘tune out’ those frequencies that are notassigned, or not authorized, to send to it. Intercell interference isthen mitigated by further restricting frequency channels available toadjacent BS's in the network, such that BS's and SU's reusing the samefrequency channel are geographically removed from each other; factor-of−7 reductions in available channels (“reuse factors”) are typicallyemployed in first generation systems.

The total number of channels available at each BS is therefore afunction of channel bandwidth employed by the system and/or economicallyusable at the SU. Hardware and regulatory limits on total spectrumavailable for such channels, and interference mitigation needs of thecellular network (cellular reuse factor), effectively constrain thedivisibility of the spectrum and thus the geographical interactingcomplexity of current networks. (i.e. if the hardware requires a 200 kHzdifferentiation, and the network has 5 MHz of spectrum available, then25 separate channels are available.) Channelization for most 1G cellularis 25-30 kHz (30 kHz in US, 25 kHz most other places; for 2G cellular is30 kHz (FDMA-TDMA) for IS-136, 200 kHz for (FDMA-TDMA) GSM, 1.25 MHz for(FDMA-CDMA) IS-95; 2.5G maintains GSM time-frequency layout; andproposed and now-instantiated channelization for 3G cellular isFDMA-TDMA-CDMA with 5 MHz, 10 MHz, and 20 MHz frequency channels.

Most so-called second generation CMRS and Personal CommunicationServices (PCS) (e.g. GSM and IS-136), and ‘2.5 generation’ mobilitysystems (e.g., EDGE), further divide each frequency channel into timeslots allocated over time frames, to provide Time Division MultipleAccess (TDMA) between a BS and SUs. (For example, if the hardwarerequires at least 1 ms of signal and the polling cycle is 10 ms, only 10separate channels are available; the first from 0 to 1 ms, the secondfrom 1 to 2 ms, and so on.) The combination of TDMA with FDMA nominallymultiplies the number of channels available at a given BS for a givenincrease in hardware complexity. This increase hardware need comes fromthe fact that such an approach will require the system to employ a morecomplex modulation format, one that can support individual and combinedFDMA-TDMA, e.g., FM (for FDMA AMPS) versus slotted root-Nyquist.pi./4-DQPSK (for IS-136 and EDGE) or GMSK (for GSM).

Some second generation mobility systems (e.g. IS95), and most thirdgeneration mobility systems, provide code division multiple access(CDMA) between a BS and multiple SUs (for example, IS-136 provides FDMAat 1.25 MHz), using different, fixed spreading codes for each link. Theadditional “degrees of freedom” (redundant time or frequencytransmission) used by this or other spread spectrum modulation can(among other advantages) mitigate or even exploit channel distortion dueto propagation between nodes over multiple paths, e.g., a direct andreflection path (FIG. 4), by allowing the communicator to operate in thepresence of multipath frequency “nulls” our outages that may besignificantly larger then the bandwidth of the prespread baseband signal(but less than the bandwidth of the spread signal).

Different spreading code techniques include direct-sequence spreadspectrum (DSSS) and frequency hop multiple access (FMHA); for eachimplemented, the hardware at each end of a link has to be able to managethe frequency and/or time modulation to encode and decode the signalcorrectly. Spreading codes can also be made adaptive, based on user,interference, and channel conditions. But each increase in thecomplexity of spread spectrum modulation and spreading code techniquesuseable by a network increases the complexity of the constituent partsof the network, for either every BS and SU can handle every techniqueimplemented in the network, or the risk arises that a BS will not beable to communicate to a particular SU should they lack common coding

Finally, communication nodes may employ further spatial means to improvecommunications capability e.g. to allow BS's to link with larger numbersof SU's, e.g., using multiple antennae with azimuthally separatedmainlobe gain responses, to communicate with SU's over multiple spatialsectors covering its service area. These antennae can provide spacedivision multiple access (SDMA) between multiple SU's communicating withthe BS over the same frequency channel, time slot, or spreading code, orto provide reuse enhancement by decreasing range between BS's allowed touse the same time slot or frequency channel (thereby reducing reusefactor required by the communication system). A BS may communicate withan intended SU using a fixed antenna aimed at a well-defined,fixed-angle sectors (e.g. Sector 1 being between 0 and 60 degrees,Sector 2 between 60 and 120 degrees, and so forth), or using an adaptiveor “smart” antenna that combines multiple antennae feeds to optimizespatial response on each frequency channel and time slot. The latterapproach can further limit or reduce interference received at BS or SUnodes, by directing selective ‘nulls’ in the direction of SU's during BSoperations. (FIG. 5). This is straightforward at the BS receiver, moredifficult at the BS transmitter (unless if the system is time-divisionduplex (TDD) or otherwise single-frequency (e.g., simplex, as commonlyemployed in private mobile radio systems)), or if the SU is based at“large” platforms such as planes, trains, or automobiles, or are used inother applications. This approach can provide additional benefits, bymitigating or even exploiting channel distortion due to propagationbetween nodes over multiple paths, e.g., a direct and reflection path. Afurther refinement that has been at least considered possible toadaptive SDMA signal management is the use of signal polarization, whichcan double degrees of freedom available to mitigate interference ormultipath at BS or SU receivers, or to increase capacity available atindividual links or nodes in the network. However, currentimplementations generally require antennae and transmissions with sizeor co-location requirements that are infeasible (measurable in meters)for high-mobility network units.

Various combinations of TDMA, CDMA, FDMA, and SDMA approaches have beenenvisioned or implemented for many other applications and services,including private mobile radio (PMR) services; location/monitoringservices (LMS) and Telematics services; fixed wireless access (FWA)services; wireless local, municipal, and wide area networks (LAN's,MAN's, and WAN's), and wireless backhaul networks.

In other prior art implementations, a more-complex and capable BSassigns and manages the differentiation scheme or schemes among itsSU's, using scheduling and assignment algorithms of varying power,complexity, and coordination to manage communications between the BS andits SU's, and between BS's in the overall wireless electromagneticcommunications network. For all such networks, the key goal of theseimplementations are to provide a desired increase in capacity orperformance (e.g., quality of service, power consumption, range,availability, or deployment advantage) in exchange for the increasingcomplexity and cost of the implementation. Everyone wants ‘more bang forthe buck’, despite the limitations imposed by physics and hardware.

It is worth noting for the moment that none of the prior art containsmeans for managing power at the local level, that is, at each particularnode, which benefits the wireless communications network as a whole. Itis also worth noting that all encounter a real-world complexity: themore power that is poured into one particular signal, the more thatsignal becomes ‘noise’ to all other signals in the area it is sent to.(Even spatial differentiation only ‘localizes’ that problem to the givensector of the transmission; it does not resolve it.)

In two-way communication networks, the network must provide means tocommunicate in each link direction, i.e., from the BS to the SU, andfrom the SU back to the BS. Most PMP networks provide communication notonly from the BS to the SU, and from the SU to the BS, but from one SUto a BS, thence to another BS, and eventually to another SU (FIG. 6A).This requires additional channels and fails to exploit possiblediversity already present (FIG. 6B). Generally, each individual SU isless complex (in hardware and embedded software) than a BS to leveragethe higher cost of the more complex BS over the many lesser SU nodes.Considerations affecting this provision in the prior art include:two-way communication protocols (so your signal is recognized asdistinct from noise); traffic symmetry or asymmetry at the link or node,and user traffic models. Each of these is briefly discussed in turn.

Protocols are necessary to govern the transmission and receptionprocess. Protocols that have been used to accomplish this in prior artinclude: (a) Simplex, (b) Frequency Division Duplex (FDD), and (c) TimeDivision Duplex (TDD) protocols.

A Simplex protocol, as the name suggests, enforces the simplestcommunication method: each communication is one-way, with thecommunication between two users occurring serially, rather thansimultaneously. (E.g., the method still used by ham radio enthusiaststoday, when a speaker signals the start of his message with his callsign or name, the end of one part of his message with ‘over’, and theend of his link to the recipient with, ‘over and out’.) In thisprotocol, an originating node first transmits an entire message to arecipient node, after which the recipient node is provided with anopportunity to transmit back to the originating node. Thisretransmission can be a lengthy return message; a brief acknowledgementand possible request for retransmission of erroneous messages; or nomessage at all. Simplex protocols are commonly used in private mobileradio services; family radio networks; push-to-talk (PTT) radio links;and tactical military radios such as SINCGARS. Simplex protocols alsoform the basis of many ad hoc and random access radio systems such asSlotted ALOHA.

Two-way communication is much more complex (as anyone who has tried tospeak and listen simultaneously can attest). Frequency Division Duplex(FDD) protocols divide the flow of communication between two widelyseparated frequency channels in FDMA networks, such that all “uplink”nodes (BS's) receive data from “downlink” nodes (SU's) over one block ofuplink frequency channels, and transmit data back to the downlink nodesover a separate block of downlink frequency channels. The uplink anddownlink blocks are separated at each end of the link using a “frequencydiplexer” with sufficient isolation (out-of-block signal rejection) toallow the receive channel to be received without significant crosstalkfrom the (much stronger) transmit signal.

Time Division Duplex (TDD), though perceived by the users as beingsimultaneous, is technically serial; this protocol provides two-waycommunication in FDMA-TDMA networks by dividing each TDMA time frameinto alternating uplink and downlink subframes in which data is passedto and from the uplink and downlink nodes (FIG. 8). The duration of theTDMA frame is short enough to be imperceptible to the network and user.It is both simpler to implement and uses less of the scarce bandwidththan FDD.

Traffic symmetry (and its reverse, asymmetry), refers to the relativeuplink and downlink data rate, either on an individual link(uplink/downlink pair), or aggregated at an individual node in thenetwork. For links, the question is whether the direction of thecommunication between one node and another makes a difference. If theuplink from the BS to the SU is substantively similar to the downlinkfrom the SU to the BS, then the link communication is described assymmetric. On the other hand, if the downlink from the BS to the SU issubstantially greater than any uplink from the SU to the BS, then thelink communication is asymmetric. This can be envisioned as follows:does the communication link between node A and node B represent a pipe,or a funnel? It doesn't matter which way the pipe/funnel is pointing, itis the comparison between uplink and downlink capacity that determinesthe symmetry or asymmetry.

For nodes, the symmetry or asymmetry may refer to the relative capacityof one node to the others. When each BS has far more capacity than theindividual SUs, the network's nodes are asymmetric (FIG. 9, where C andE>B and A>D). If, on the other hand, each node is reasonably alike incapacity, then they are symmetric. This is also known as a‘peer-to-peer’ network. The former is the most common instantiation inthe prior art for wireless electromagnetic communications networks.

A final consideration is the traffic model for the network as a whole.Just as a highway engineer has to consider more than the physicseffecting each particular car at each point along the road whendesigning the interchanges and road system, those building a wirelessmultipoint electromagnetic communication network must consider how thecommunication traffic will be handled. The two dimensions, ordifferentiations, currently seen are (a) how individual communicationsare switched (i.e. how messages are passed along the links from theorigination node to the recipient node and vice versa), and (b) how aparticular communication is distributed amongst the set of nodes betweenthe two end-points (i.e. whether a single path or diverse paths areused).

The two models for how communications are switched are thecircuit-switched and packet-switched models. The former is bestexemplified by the modern Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). Whenuser A wants to communicate with user B, a definite and fixed circuit isestablished from A through any number of intervening points to user B,and that circuit is reserved for their use until the communication ends(A or B hangs up). Because the PSTN originated when all communicationlinks had to be made by elements that shared the same capacity limit asthe telephone users, that is, by human operators, they had no suchexcess capacity to exploit. (There was a point in time when economistsextrapolated that the needed number of operators would exceed the numberof human beings.) Fortunately automated circuit switching was developed.

The downside to the circuit-switched model is that the network'sresources are used inefficiently; those parts comprising a given circuitare tied up during relatively long periods of dormancy, since thededicated circuits are in place during active as well as inactiveperiods of conversations (roughly 40% in each link direction for voicetelephony). This inefficiency is even more pronounced in datatransmission systems, due to the inherent burstiness of data transportprotocols such as TCP/IP.

The second model, ‘packet-switched’, is embodied in the much-more modernInternet. In this approach, the communication is divided up intomultiple fragments, or packets, each of which is sent off through themost accessible route.

Whether the ‘circuit’ is a physical land-line, a frequency channel, or atime slot, does not matter; the import for the network is how theoverall capacity is constrained when handling individual communications:on a link-by-link basis, or on a packet-by-packet basis.

The other differentiation, how a particular communication is distributedamongst the set of nodes between the two end-points, is betweenconnection-oriented vs. connectionless communications.Connection-oriented communications establish an agreed-to, single, linkpath joining the two endpoints which is maintained throughout thecommunication; connectionless communications can employ multipleavailable link paths simultaneously. (The Internet's TCP/IP protocol isan exemplar of this approach.) Though there is a surface similaritybetween this differentiation and that of circuit/packet switching, theconnection-oriented communication does not necessitate dedication of theentire capacity of each sub-part of the connection to the particularcommunication being handled; i.e. the network could ‘fill up’ anintermediate stage to that stage's capacity as long as it can split offthe joined communications before the end is reached and avoidoverloading any of the shared link sub-parts.

Again, it is worth noting for the moment that none of the priorapproaches or differentiations provide means for power management forthe network as a whole or present a potential solution to the real-worldcomplexity whereby the more power that was poured into one particularsignal, the more that signal became ‘noise’ to all other signals in thearea it was sent to.

Presently, most wireless multipoint electromagnetic communicationnetworks are PMP implementations. The disadvantages of these prior artwireless PMP wireless electromagnetic communication networks include:

-   -   (1) Requiring a predetermined distinction between hardware and        software implemented in BS's and SU's, and in topology used to        communicate between BS, as opposed to that used to communicate        between a BS and its assigned SU's.    -   (2) Creating a need to locate BS's in high locations to minimize        pathloss to its SU, and maximize line-of-sight (LOS) coverage,        thereby increasing the cost of the BS with the elevation. (In        urban areas, higher elevations are more costly; in suburban        areas, higher elevations require a more noticeable structure and        create ill-will amongst those closest to the BS; in rural areas,        higher elevations generally are further from the service lines        for power and maintenance personnel).    -   (3) Creating problems with compensating for partial coverage,        fading and ‘shadowing’ due to buildings, foliage penetration,        and other obstruction, particularly in areas subject to change        (growth, urban renewal, or short and long range changes in        pathloss characteristics) or high-mobility systems (FIG. 4).    -   (4) Balancing the cost of system-wide capacity increase effected        by BS upgrades over subscribers who may not wish to pay for        others' additional benefit.    -   (5) Creating problems with reduction in existing subscriber        capacity, when new subscribers are added to a particular sector        nearing maximal capacity (FIGS. 7A & 7B; if each BS can handle        only 3 channels, then E and C can readily substitute in a new BS        D, but neither A nor B can accept D's unused 3d channel).    -   (6) Balancing power cost in a noisy environment when competing        uses of the spectra occur, either amongst the subscribers or        from external forces (e.g. weather).    -   (7) Limiting capacity of the network to the maximum capacity of        the BS managing the set of channels. and,    -   (8) Losing network access for SU's if their BS fails.        Multipoint Networks

The tremendously increased efficiency of emplaced fiberoptic landlines,and the excess capacity of ‘dark fiber’ currently available, as well asthe advent of new Low-Orbit Satellite (LOS) systems, pose a problem forany mobile, wireless, multipoint electromagnetic communication network.Furthermore, there is an ongoing ‘hardware war’ amongst the companiesproviding such networks. For with the increasing use of cellularwireless communications a ‘race up the frequencies’ has begun; no soonerdoes hardware come on the market enabling use of a new portion of theelectromagnetic spectrum, than transmissions begin to crowd into it andfill both the geographic and frequency space. Both these dynamics actingtogether are further complicated by the potential merging of the singleBS/multiple receiver (or ‘broadcast’) model of the radio fixed frequencyrange. Code division multiple access techniques, also referred to hereinas CDMA, assign a signature to each subchannel which describes the pulseamplitude modulation, also referred to herein as PAM, to be used by thesubchannel for communication. Well-known digital signal processingtechniques may be applied to de-multiplex such multiplexed signals onthe communication channel.

A variety of techniques have been applied to many of these knownmodulation methods to further improve the utilization of the channelbandwidth. It is a continuing problem to improve the bandwidthutilization of a channel so as to maximize the data throughput over thechannel. In particular, it is a continuing problem to dynamically adaptthe multiplexing techniques to maximize network performance overparticular signaling patterns, usage, and power. As mobile transmittersand receivers are moved relative to one another, channel bandwidthutilization efficiency may change. It is a problem to adapt presentlyknown multiplexing techniques to such dynamic environmental factors.

Problems identified in M. K. Varanasi's U.S. Pat. No. 6,219,341 includedesigning signature waveforms for a particular channel, multiplexing aplurality of digital data streams over a communications channel, andmaking a communications channel dynamically adaptable. That patentfocuses on non-multipath environments where a single available channelwith a fixed frequency range and multiple receiving devices exist; thereare not a multiplicity of antennae at either receiver(s) or at thetransmitter, and no network-effect adaptations and methodologies. Thatpatent provides many references to work on the problem of multipleaccess communications problem is one where several autonomouslyoperating users transmit information over a common communicationschannel, which do nor resolve problems such as:

-   -   “Multiple-Access (FDMA) techniques pre-assign time or frequency        bands to all users . . . absurdly wasteful in time and bandwidth        when used in applications where communications is bursty as in        personal, mobile, and indoor communications. In such        applications, some form of dynamic channel sharing is therefore        necessary . . . ”; and,        and television fields with the linked pair-sets (two        inter-communicating nodes) or ‘dedicated channel’ model of the        plain old telephone system (PSTN).

The race is becoming even more frenetic as voice and data communicationsmerge. This evolution must accommodate packet-switched, connectionlessdata protocols such as TCP/IP, which transmits data in multiple burstsover multiple communication channels. The topologies and capacities, ofthese channels may change during a communication session, requiringcomplex and burdensome routing and resource management to control andoptimize the network Finally, future wireless electromagneticcommunications networks may need to communicate with mobile platforms(e.g., automobiles in Telematics applications), peripherals (e.g.,printers, PDAs, keyboards), and untethered ‘smart’ appliances, furtherincreasing connectivity capacity, and quality of service (QoS) needs ofthe network. Nowadays, advanced wireless electromagnetic communicationsnetworks must routinely handle both voice and data communications, andcommunications amongst people, between people and devices, and betweendevices.

Prior art knows to use radio frequency communication channels totransfer digital data between devices, and to encode digital data on achannel such that a parameter of the communication channel is modulatedin accordance with the values of the digital data bit sequence to betransferred. Many applications of such communication channels permitmultiple, simultaneous access to the channel by a plurality of digitaldata streams, for example, a plurality of digitized voice data streamsor a plurality of computer digital data streams. The plurality ofdigital data streams is multiplexed over the communication channel bysubdividing the channel into a plurality of subchannels eachcharacterized by unique communication parameters which may bede-multiplexed at the opposite end of the communication channel.

The communication techniques referred to above (CDMA, TDMA, FDMA), arealso known to be useful for such subdivision of a communication channel.For example, time division multiple access, also referred to herein asTDMA, multiplexes the subchannels onto the channel by assigning eachsubchannel a period of time during which the subchannel uses the channelexclusively. Frequency division multiple access techniques, alsoreferred to herein as FDMA, assign each subchannel a sub-range of the

-   -   “While Random Multiple Access techniques such as ALOHA allow        dynamic channel sharing [citation omitted] . . . they are,        however, unsuitable for the aforementioned applications where        there is usually more than one active transmitter at any given        time.”

Other techniques identified in Varanesi are Dynamic TDMA (which requiresboth a reservation and a feedback channel, cutting the channelsavailable for content and increasing the network system overhead),adaptive timing enforcement rather than user-signal differentiation;differentiation between BS and SU signal management; use of linear PAMpre-assigned rather than dynamic adaptation; presuming transmissions arelimited to the number of active simultaneous transmitters instead ofallowing differentiated symbol (e.g. QAM) division of any particularchannel into subchannels; assigning, statically, a signature waveform toevery transmitter and not adapting to network flows. Reservationchannels are also used in dynamic CDMA, which are also limited topre-designed waveforms and BS units only. In the prior art, Varanesi inparticular asserts:

-   -   “ . . . when a carrier is not lightly loaded, so that the number        of active users for that carrier is a sizeable fraction of the        assigned spread factor, decorrelative and linear MMSE detectors        . . . [citations omitted] . . . will not be satisfactory . . . ”        and,    -   “ . . . the hardware costs of base-stations in FDMA are higher        in that they must have as many transceivers as the maximum        number of users allocated per carrier (see R. Steele supra)        whereas dynamic SSMA only requires one transceiver per carrier.”

Varanesi's BEMA approach suffers from a several significant defects inmodern, high-mobility, rapidly-changing communication networkenvironments: (1) “the signature waveforms are specifically designed forthat receiver”, and, (2) “they may be slowly re-allocated as the trafficconditions—such as the received power levels and number of activetransmitters—change and evolve”. In the dynamic, mobile,constantly-changing environment these constraints do not allow enoughadaptivity and flexibility. As the number of common users grows, therisk develops of an electromagnetic repetition of Garrett Hardin's‘tragedy of the commons’; in short, that mutual signaling devolves toshared noise. Simply adding power, or additional frequencies, works onlyas a short-sighted or short term solution; the real need is for networksthat make use of multipath and multiple user effects rather than ignorethem. (FIGS. 10 and 11 respectively exemplify static and mobilemultipath environments.)

Various approaches to treating other users of the communications channel(or frequency) briefly mentioned in Varanesi also include: “(a) treatmutual inter-user interference as additive noise; (b) treat uncancelledinter-user interference as additive noise; and, (c) decorrelateuncancelled interference.” But the concept of using the signaling frommultiple sources as a way of harmonizing and organizing the information,and identifying the channel diversity and environmental conditions toallow adaptation and optimization, is nowhere there suggested.

Beamforming is a particular concern for wireless electromagneticcommunications networks, especially where a network is dense or wherethere are portable, low-mobility, or high-mobility SU. Within wirelessmobile communication systems, four techniques have been developed forimproving communication link performance using directive transmitantennas: (i) selection of a particular fixed beam from an available setof fixed beams, (ii) adaptive beam forming based on receive signal angleestimates, (iii) adaptive transmission based on feedback provided by theremote mobile SU, and (iv) adaptive transmit beam forming based upon theinstantaneous receive beam pattern. Each of these prior art techniquesis described briefly below.

In the first technique, one of several fixed BS antenna beam patterns isselected to provide a fixed beam steered in a particular direction. Thefixed antenna beams are often of equal beam width, and are oftenuniformly offset in boresight angle so as to encompass all desiredtransmission angles. The antenna beam selected for transmissiontypically corresponds to the beam pattern through which the largestsignal is received. The fixed beam approach offers the advantage ofsimple implementation, but provides no mechanism for reducing the signalinterference power radiated to remote mobile SU(s) within thetransmission beam of the BS. This arises because of the inability of thetraditional fixed beam approach to sense the interference powerdelivered to undesired users.

The second approach involves “adapting” the beam pattern produced by aBS phase array in response to changing multipath conditions. In suchbeamforming antenna arrays, or “beamformers”, the antenna beam patternis generated so as to maximize signal energy transmitted to (“transmitbeamforming”), and received from (“receive beamforming”), an intendedrecipient mobile SU.

While the process of transmit beamforming to a fixed location over aline-of-sight radio channel may be performed with relative ease, thetask of transmitting to a mobile SU over a time-varying multipathcommunication channel is typically considerably more difficult. Oneadaptive transmit beamforming approach contemplates determining eachangle of departure (AOD) at which energy is to be transmitted from theBS antenna array to a given remote mobile SU. Each AOD corresponds toone of the signal paths of the multipath channel, and is determined byestimating each angle of arrival (AOA) at the BS of signal energy fromthe given SU. A transmit beam pattern is then adaptively formed so as tomaximize the radiation projected along each desired AOD (i.e., the AODspectrum), while minimizing the radiation projected at all other angles.Several well known algorithms (e.g., MUSIC, ESPRIT, and WSF) may be usedto estimate an AOA spectrum corresponding to a desired AOD spectrum.

Unfortunately, obtaining accurate estimates of the AOA spectrum forcommunications channels comprised of numerous multipath constituents hasproven problematic. Resolving the AOA spectrum for multiple co-channelmobile SUs is further complicated if the average signal energy receivedat the BS from any of the mobile SUs is significantly less than theenergy received from other mobile SUs. This is due to the fact that thecomponents of the BS array response vector contributed by thelower-energy incident signals are comparatively small, thus making itdifficult to ascertain the AOA spectrum corresponding to those mobileSUs. Moreover, near field obstructions proximate BS antenna arrays tendto corrupt the array calibration process, thereby decreasing theaccuracy of the estimated AOA spectrum.

In the third technique mentioned above, feedback information is receivedat the BS from both the desired mobile SU, and from mobile SUs to whichit is desired to minimize transmission power. This feedback permits theBS to “learn” the “optimum” transmit beam pattern, i.e., the beampattern which maximizes transmission to the desired mobile SU andminimizes transmission to all other SUs. One disadvantage of thefeedback approach in the prior art is the presumption that the mobileradio needs to be significantly more complex than would otherwise berequired. Moreover, the information carrying capacity of each radiochannel is reduced as a consequence of the bandwidth allocated fortransmission of antenna training signals and mobile SU feedbackinformation. The resultant capacity reduction may be significant whenthe remote mobile SU move at a high average velocity, as is the case inmost cellular telephone systems.

The fourth conventional technique for improving communication linkperformance involves use of an optimum receive beam pattern as thepreferred transmission beam pattern. After calibrating for differencesbetween the antenna array and electronics used in the transmitter andreceiver, it is assumed that the instantaneous estimate of the nature ofthe receive channel is equivalent to that of the transmit channel.Unfortunately, multipath propagation and other transient channelphenomenon have been considered to be problems, with the prior artconsidering that such substantially eliminate any significantequivalence between frequency-duplexed transmit and receive channels, orbetween time-division duplexed transmit and receive channels separatedby a significant time interval. As a consequence, communication linkperformance fails to be improved.

At any given point the hardware, bandwidth, and user-determinedconstraints (Quality of Service, number of users simultaneouslycommunicating, content density of communications) may demand the utmostfrom the system. Not only must a modern wireless electromagneticcommunications network simultaneously provide the maximum capacity(measured by the number of bits that can be reliably transmitted bothover the entire network and between any given pair of sending andreceiving nodes in that network), but also, it must use the least amountof power (likewise measured over the entire network and at eachparticular node). Because, in any increasingly crowded electromagneticspectrum, capacity and power are interactive constraints. To optimizethe system over the sweep of potential circumstances, with minimalduplication or resource expenditure, designers must attain the greatestcapacity and flexibility for any given set of hardware and signal space.In a wireless electromagnetic communication network, and moreparticularly in a cellular communication network, the greatest capacityand flexibility are offered by multipoint, or multiple-input andmultiple-output (MIMO) systems.

Prior implementations of MIMO systems have been limited topoint-to-point links exploiting propagation of signal energy overmultiple communication paths, for example, a direct path and one or morereflection paths. In this environment, link capacity can be increased byemploying an array of spatially separated antennas at each end of thelink, and using these arrays to establish substantively orthogonal linksthat principally exploit each of these communication paths.Mathematically, the channel response between the multiple antennasemployed at each end of the link has a multiple-input, multiple-output(MIMO) matrix representation, hence the term “MIMO link” for this case.(See FIG. 12, which exemplifies just such a physical PTP multipath,consisting of one direct and two reflective links, as shown graphicallyin FIG. 10; then contrast that to the data flow diagram of such a PTPlink in FIG. 11.)

Using the tools of information theory disclosed in the referenced patentapplications, Paulraj and Raleigh have shown that these links canapproach the maximum capacity of the point-to-point communicationchannel (given appropriate power constraints and spatially andtemporally “white” additive Gaussian background noise) by (1) dividingthe channel into “substantively orthogonal frequency subchannels,” ortime-frequency subchannels, and then, on each subchannel (2) redundantlytransmitting multiple data “modes” (spatial subchannels within eachtime-frequency subchannel) over multiple antennas using vector lineardistribution weights that are proportional to the “right-hand”eigenvectors of the MIMO channel frequency response on that subchannel,and, next, (3) combining receive antenna array elements using vectorlinear combiner weights that are proportional to the “left-hand”eigenvectors of the MIMO channel frequency response on that subchannel,to recover the data mode transmitted using the correspondingright-handed eigenvector of the MIMO channel response on thatsubchannel. The vector transmit weights are then (4) further scaled toprovide a normalized response dictated by a “water filling” formulacomputed over the aggregate set of subchannels and data modes employedby the communication link, based on the eigenvalues of the MIMO channelfrequency response on each subchannel, and a vector coding formula(sometimes referred to as a “space-time” or “space-frequency” code) isused to (5) transmit data over each subchannel and data mode at themaximum bits/symbol (or transmit efficiency) (or data rate) allowed bythe received signal-to-noise ratio on that subchannel and data mode.

Raleigh has also shown that this capacity of a MIMO PTP link increasesnearly linearly with the number of antennas employed at each end of thelink, if the number of propagation paths is greater than or equal to thenumber of antennas at each end of the link, the pathloss over each pathis nearly equal, and either (1) the spatial separation between paths islarge in some sense (e.g., the propagation occurs over paths thatimpinge on the link transceivers at angles of transmission and receptionthat are greater than 1/10 the “beamwidth of the array), (2) the antennaelements are separated widely enough to provide statisticallyindependent channel response on each MIMO path (e.g., if the antennasare separated by greater than 10 times the wavelength of thetransmission frequency in Raleigh fading channels).

Raleigh has also shown that a PTP MIMO channel response (allowingimplementation of high capacity links exploiting this channel response)can also be induced by redundantly transmitting data over polarizationdiverse antennas using the procedure described above. In U.S. Pat. No.6,128,276, Agee has also shown that a PTP MIMO channel response can beinduced by redundantly transmitting data over multiple frequencychannels or subchannels. In fact, MIMO channel responses can be inducedby redundantly transmitting data over combinations of “diversity” paths,including independent spatial paths, independent polarization paths,independent, frequency channels, or independent time channels.

Paulraj, Raleigh, and Agee teach many additional advantages for MIMO PTPlinks, including improved range through exploitation of “array gain”provided by transmit and receive antennas; non-line-of-sightcommunication over reflections from buildings and ducting down streets;and reduced transmit power through ability to achieve desired capacitiesat lower power levels at each antenna in the arrays. Agee also teachesmeans for adjusting the array adaptively and blindly, based on receiveexploitation of signal coding added during transmit operations; fornulling interference signals at each transceiver; and for exploitingreciprocity of the MIMO channel response to adapt transmit weights inTDD PTP links.

Agee, B. G. et. al. added some indication in the patent application Ser.No. 08/804,619, filed on Feb. 24, 1997, titled “HighlyBandwidth-Efficient Communications”, since abandoned but pursued in partin Ser. No. 08/993,721 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,359,923), to discretespread-spectrum, non-orthogonal multitone approaches, and indicated thatMIMO systems may have additional benefits in point-to-multipoint andcellular PMP networks.

In a MIMO system, the nodes at each end of a link will have multipleantennae, and establish between them one link per pair of antennae.(There can still be a BS/SU division; for example, a BS may have 20pairs of antennae, while each SU have but 2 pair, or 4, antennae,thereby allowing a 1-10 BS/SU ratio without any overlap.) In “WirelessPersonal Communications: Trends and Challenges”, pp. 69-80, Rappaport,Woerner, and Reeds, Editors, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994, at p. 69Agee notes: “the use of an M-element multiport antenna array at the BSof any communication network can increase the frequency reuse of thenetwork by a factor of M and greatly broaden the range of input SINRsrequired for adequate demodulation . . . ”.

Some of the mathematical background for MIMO generally can be found inE. Weinstein et. al.'s U.S. Pat. No. 5,539,832 for “Multi-channel signalseparation using cross-polyspectra”, which speaks specifically to alimited field of separating signals from received from plural sources.That considered linear time invariant (LTI) MIMO systems, noting thatsample response matrices and frequency vectors, vector-valued time andfrequency indices could be used.

In cellular wireless systems, a BS transceiver simultaneouslycommunicates with several mobile users. In such systems, an antennaarray at the central base can improve the quality of communication withthe mobile users and increase the number of users supportable by thesystem, without the allocation of additional bandwidth. But a problemmay arise when a SU can communicate with multiple BSs and causeunexpected diversity and interference. (This is one of the principalreasons cell phone use from airlines is restricted; the in-air SU iseffectively equidistant to many BSs and that network suffers.)

To increase quality of the communication in a wireless system, anantenna array can provide diversity to combat fading. Fading of thebase-mobile link is due to destructive interference of the variousmultipaths in the propagation medium, and at times can cause signalattenuation by as much as 30 dB. Time and frequency diversity aretraditional techniques which are highly effective in preventing signalloss. An antenna array can be used to provide beampattern diversity,which is an additional technique that supplements time and frequencydiversity.

To increase capacity in a wireless system, an antenna array canimplement same cell frequency reuse, which recognizes that each signaltypically has a different angle of arrival at the BS. Using thistechnique, the base sends signals to multiple receivers on the sametime/frequency channel within the same sector, and uses a separate beamto minimize crosstalk and maximize desired signal for each receiver.Such beams provide a means of reusing the resources of time andbandwidth, and they overlay with the traditional means of multiplexingsuch as (T/F/CDMA). Same cell frequency reuse is also sometimes known asspatial division multiple access (SDMA).

There are two aspects to using antenna arrays at the base in mobileradio: receive antenna processing (reverse link) and transmit antennaprocessing (forward link). In the forward link approach, there are “openloop” and “closed loop” approaches. An “open loop” approach is exploredby G. Raleigh et al. in “A Blind Adaptive Transmit Antenna Algorithm forWireless Communication,” International Communications Conference, 1995.This transmit beamforming method uses the reverse link informationsignals sent by the mobiles as a means of determining the transmitbeampatterns. This “open loop” method, however, does not provide thetransmitter with feedback information about the transmitted signals, andis consequently less robust to changes in the propagation medium thanfeedback methods.

In contrast to the “open loop” approach, the “closed loop” approach usesan additional feedback signal from the mobiles. The transmitting arrayhas no a priori knowledge of the location of the mobiles or thescattering bodies, and an adaptive antenna array can use a feedbacksignal from the mobile receivers to give the transmitter a means ofgauging its beampatterns. Because of multipath, an array that simplydirects a mainlobe towards a mobile may result in a fade of the desiredsignal or crosstalk to other mobiles. So unless the base can alsoaccount for all of the scattering bodies in the environment, undesiredcrosstalk or fading is liable to occur. Since adaptive transmittingantennas do not possess built-in feedback, the receivers must provide afeedback signal to enable the transmitter to function effectively inthis approach.

In U.S. Pat. No. 5,471,647, “Method for Minimizing Cross-Talk inAdaptive Transmission Antennas,” which is hereby incorporated byreference, Gerlach et al. present a method of multiple signaltransmission using an antenna array and probing signals together withfeedback from the receivers back to the transmitter. Thisprobing-feedback method allows the transmitter to estimate theinstantaneous channel vector, from which the transmitting beamformerensures signal separation even in the face of time-varying multipath inthe propagation medium. This method is further described by Gerlach etal. in the following articles which are hereby incorporated byreference: “Spectrum Reuse Using Transmitting Antenna Arrays withFeedback,” Proc. International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, andSignal Processing, pp. 97-100, April 1994; “Adaptive TransmittingAntenna Arrays with Feedback,” IEEE Signal Processing Letters, vol. 1,pp. 150-2, October 1994; and “Adaptive Transmitting Antenna Arrays withFeedback,” IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, submitted October1994.

While the method of D. Gerlach et al. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,471,647purportedly minimizes crosstalk and eliminates fading, Gerlachidentifies, in a later patent, a major problem therein: it is limited bythe high feedback data rates that are required to track theinstantaneous channel vector. High feedback data rates are undesirablebecause they require a large channel capacity on a link from thereceivers back to the transmitter.

If the transmitter is located in an urban environment or other clutteredarea, scattering from buildings and other bodies in the propagationmedium creates an interference pattern. This interference patterncontains points of constructive and destructive interference, spaced aslittle as one-half wavelength apart. As the receiver moves through suchan environment, the channel vector can change significantly when thereceiver moves as little as one-tenth of a wavelength. Consequently, thetransmitter must repeatedly estimate a new channel vector by sendingprobing signals and receiving feedback. The feedback rate needed is19,200 bps for a receiver moving 30 mph receiving a 900 MHz carrierusing a six element array with four bit accuracy. Gerlach concluded that(1) the need for such high feedback rates renders antenna arraysimpractical for most applications; and (2) in addition to high feedbackrates, the method of D. Gerlach et al. can be difficult to implementbecause the air interface standard would have to be changed to add inthe feedback feature. The users would have to exchange their oldhandsets for new ones that are compatible with the new feedbackstandard. This is a costly and impractical modification.

Several alternative approaches to the limited problem of minimizingcrosstalk in a wireless communications system were disclosed in D.Gerlach, et. al.'s later U.S. Pat. No. 5,634,199. These included the useof information weight vectors that minimized the time-average crosstalk,matrices (subcorrelation and autocorrelation), linear combination ofdiversity vectors, and dominant generalized eigenvectors. Furthermore,their approach presumed that multiple antennae only existed at thesystem's BS, rather than at each node. However, the methods disclosedtherein still require significant network capacity be devoted tocross-system signal management rather than signal content.

Another approach is to design the network such that at every pointmultipath can be actively avoided and direct line of sight existsbetween each SU and a member of a subset of nodes, said subset membersalso having a line of sight amongst themselves in a mesh, as in Berger,J. et. al., PCT WO 00/25485, “Broadband Wireless Mesh Topology Network”.That patent notes that its applicability is limited to the frequenciesabove 6 GHz, and specifically below 3 GHz, “ . . . where multiplereflections via non line of sight reception interfere dramatically withthe network performance and reduce the network capacity when subscribercount increases in the area.”

However, the approaches suggested in the prior art, (Paulraj, Raleigh,Agee, et. al.) are not generally feasible or economical in manyapplications. For example, the 10-wavelength rule-of-thumb forstatistically independent MIMO propagation path can be difficult toachieve in mobility applications, which typically require transmissionof signal energy at well below 10 GHz (3 cm, or 1/10 foot, wavelength)to avoid dynamic, stability, and weather affects prevailing above thatfrequency. A 10-wavelength antenna separation corresponds to 1-to-10feet at frequencies of 1-to-10 GHz, achievable at BSs in mobilitysystems (for small numbers of antennas), but not practical in mobileSU's However advantageous the improvements might be from going to a MIMOsystem (e.g. reducing fading and co-channel interference), the humanfactor (namely, that people would not walk around with meter-plus wideantennae) militated against adoption of this approach. Even thetremendous capacity improvement of 400% suggested by Paulraj for a MIMOapproach would not overcome this consideration. Additionally, much ofthe prior art presumes that any MIMO network necessarily must reduce theSignal-to-(Interference and) Noise Ratio (SINR) in the multipath channelto zero.

In U.S. Pat. No. 6,067,290, “Spatial Multiplexing In A CellularNetwork”, A. J. Paulraj et. al. claim methods and apparatus for thepurpose stated in that title, noting that:

-   -   “Since there are quite a few services (e.g. television, FM        radio, private and public mobile communications, etc.) competing        for a finite amount of available spectrum, the amount of        spectrum which can be allocated to each channel is severely        limited. Innovative means for using the available spectrum more        efficiently are of great value. In current state of the art        systems, such as cellular telephone or broadcast television, a        suitably modulated signal is transmitted from a single base        station centrally located in the service area or cell and        propagated to receiving stations in the service area surrounding        the transmitter. The information transmission rate achievable by        such broadcast transmission is constrained by the allocated        bandwidth. Due to attenuations suffered by signals in wireless        propagation, the same frequency channel can be re-used in a        different geographical service area or cell. Allowable        interference levels determine the minimum separation between        base stations using the same channels. What is needed is a way        to improve data transfer speed in the multiple access        environments currently utilized for wireless communications        within the constraints of available bandwidth.”

Paulraj et. al. also presumes a division between BS and SU, where the BSperforms all of the adaptation, which either requires information orcontrol signals from each of the SUs that adds significantly to thesignaling overhead, or limits the adaptive process to that observableand attainable solely by the BS in response to control signals from theSUs. Paulraj also identifies the minimum spatial separation betweenantennae as ½ the carrier wavelength, i.e. ½.lamda. Furthermore, Paulrajlacks the concepts of adaptive reciprocity, network MIMO management,LEGO, power management, power optimization, capacity optimization orcapacity management. Though Paulraj speaks to using multipath, there isat best limited implementation in situations where multipath is stableand guaranteed, rather than true opportunistic implementation in adynamic and adaptive fashion.

In U.S. Pat. No. 6,006,110, G. G. Raleigh describes a time-varyingvector channel equalization approach for adaptive spatial equalization.That patent's concern is with compensating for multipath effects, ratherthan exploiting them.

In his later U.S. Pat. No. 6,101,399, G. G. Raleigh et. al. made theconcept of his 1995 paper, referenced above, the basis for that patentfor “Adaptive Beam Forming. for transmitter operation in a wirelesscommunication system”. In that paper, all of the adaptation takes placeat the BS (which has an adaptive antenna array), and none at thesubstantially different SU (which in the preferred embodiment does not).This patent uses no feedback from the receiver to the transmitter, withtransmitter weights being variously generated through an estimateddesired receive channel covariance matrix and an undesired interferencecovariance matrix, or from a pre-designed or predetermined transmit beampattern weight vectors. It also has no local modeling, no networkmanagement aspects, and makes no effort to exploit opportunisticmultipath; and its chief solution to a deteriorating signal capacity isto simply shift the most heavily impacted user away to a differentfrequency (which presumes one is available). Paulraj and Raleigh do notconsider means for extending MIMO PTP links to applications containingmultiple simultaneous links, e.g., multipoint networks (such as the PMPand cellular PMP mobility network described above). In addition, theseapproaches do not either adequately treat means for controlling such anetwork, or address several key conundra limiting MIMO application.

Diversity: The Interference Conundrum

Even assuming that a MIMO approach is desirable, or that the antennasize problem mentioned above could be ignored, the prior art faced acontradiction that argued against MIMO efforts. First, to any particularwireless link, signals generated on all other links are interference.Second, closely coincident signals can heterodyne to produce a resultantsignal that is different than any of its constituent elements. BecauseMIMO increases the number of coincident signals, it was seen asincreasing the resultant noise against which the information-carryingsignal had to be detected. Multiple access and interference are seen bymany as the single largest problem and system limitation.

Capacity as One Key Network Metric

The explosive demand for delivery of integrated voice and datacommunications over the ‘last mile’ amongst all possible nodes (humans,peripherals, appliances, desktops, or servers) has spurred increasedresearch into means for providing such communications in wirelesselectromagnetic networks. Wireless, because the cost of either initiallyinstalling, or subsequently dynamically altering, the network more oftenrepresents irretrievably sunk capital in equipment which cannot keep upwith the design-build-install product cycles. Wireless, because usersare increasingly demanding that their communication provisioning beuntethered from predetermined geographic point locations, to meet themobility demands placed upon them. In all of these demands, a key metricaffecting cost and quality of any wireless electromagneticcommunications network is the capacity of the network for any given setof internode channel responses, receive interference levels, channelbandwidths, and allowable or attainable transmission powers.

Capacity is a problem that has been studied extensively for PTPapproaches, where the well-known ‘water filling’ solution for themaximum capacity communication over channels with frequency selectivenoise and/or channel distortion. However, Paulraj and Raleigh do notconsider means for extending MIMO PTP links to applications containingmultiple simultaneous links, e.g., multipoint networks (such as the PMPand cellular PMP mobility network described above). In addition, theseapproaches do not adequately treat means for controlling such a network.In “Highly Bandwidth-Efficient Communications”, U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 08/804,619, abandoned and replaced by its continuation, Ser.No. 08/993,721, Agee, et. al., discloses a solution for extending MIMOdiversity exploitation to PMP and cellular PMP networks and forcontrolling such a network using local operations at individual nodes,by exploiting channel reciprocity to optimize network-wide mean-squarederror (MSE) of time-division duplex (TDD) multi-cell PMP networks. Thatapplication discloses a solution that is severely limited. The solutionoptimizes an “ad hoc” metric (sum of mean-square error at each node inthe network) that does not directly address any true measure of networkquality, hence it can be substantively suboptimum with respect to such ametric. For example, the solution cannot simultaneously control transmitpower and combiner output signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR)at both end of the link, and generally provides a solution that controlspower subject to a global SINR constraint that may be hugelyoverachieved (to detriment of overall network performance) at some nodesin the network. The solution does not address networks with significantnon-network interference, if that interference is nonreciprocal, forexample, if that interference is only observable at some nodes in thenetwork, or non-TDD protocols in which internode channel responses maybe reciprocal, e.g., single-frequency simplex networks. Mostimportantly, however, that solution only addresses cellular PMPnetworks, not general MIMO networks.

Capacity as a metric is complicated by one further factor: the networkmust use its own capacity to communicate about its messaging andtraffics, which puts a complex constraint on the network. The more thatit tries to communicate about how to manage itself well, the lesscapacity it has to carry other messages from the users, as opposed tothe administrators, of the network.

Overhead vs. Content Conundrum

Ongoing capacity control for a wireless electromagnetic communicationsnetwork is the control of network overhead as much as the control of thenetwork content. The more complex the environment and the system, thegreater the following conundrum: detailed network control (whichnecessarily includes signals containing information about the networkand the entire environment, separate from the signals containing thecontent being sent through the network operating in that sameenvironment) steals capacity from the network. The more the messagespace becomes filled with messages managing that same space, the lessroom there is for messages using that space to convey content amongstthe nodes. The increase in such top-level network overhead grows at amore-than-geometric rate with the growth of any network, for not onlymust the information about the network keep pace with its geometricgrowth, but also the information must come on top of the messages whichactively manage the network. Feedback on top of control on top ofsignals, when grown globally, rapidly eat up advances in hardware orsoftware.

Automation, or turning signal processing into hardware, cannot by itselfresolve this conundrum. While hardware advances can rapidly overcomehuman limitations, they can never overcome their inherent limitations,process more signals, or process the extant signals more complexly, thanthe hardware is designed to do. Every element in the network, from theCODECs to the MUXs to the wireless transceivers, can only work at lessthan their optimum capacity. The approach that of necessity approaches,asymptotically, the optimal capacity for message content in a wirelesselectromagnetic communications network is that which manages thecommunications with the least overall network burden. For any givenhardware and software of a network, that which manages best does so bymanaging least—at least as far as burdening the capacity is concerned.

In network management the content dynamics change over time, in such afashion that there are always individual nodes that are operating atless than capacity and thus have potential capacity to spare. (If onlybecause some node is processing a control command, which lessens thecontent it is sending out, which decreases the load on its neighbors,which then are free to change their control, and so forth.) Overheadcontrol which depends on centralization can never take full advantage ofsuch momentary and dynamic opportunities, because of the simple factthat the message informing the central controller of the opportunityitself reduces the overall capacity by the amount needed to transmitsuch a message (and to handle all the consequential operations orderedby the controller). Capacity control therefore becomes both a local anda global concern; the network must neither overload any particular node(requiring the repetition of lost or dropped messages, and therebydecreasing the total capacity since the sender's original signal becomeswasted), nor overload the entire system (with, for example, measurementsof remaining global capacity, taking away signal space that otherwisecould have been used for node-directed content.

One of the limitations of the prior art is that most systems block out apart of the network capacity as a network signaling preserve, whichoperates to communicate between the transmitters and receiversinformation concerning the external environment, such as the amount ofexternal interference along any particular link or channel, and theperceived Signal to (Interference and) Noise Ratio (SINR) for atransmission. The more complex, or the more crowded, the network becomesthe greater this drain of overhead on available capacity for a giveninfrastructure. Because the environment, the network, or (mostfrequently) both will change over time, network designers tend toallocate greater-than-necessary amounts to account for unforeseen futurecomplications. These signal subspaces within the network, when they areused to measure the signal, path, multipath, or interference, are onlyactively needed part of the time, yet the loss of capacity continues allof the time. If, on the other hand, they are temporally divided, thenthey must come into existence and use when the network is at its busiestto best tune the system—and thereby impose additional overhead andreduce capacity precisely when it is most valuable to the network.

Another limitation of the prior art is the presumption that the signalspace is uniformly shaped over time, wherein network averages orconstraints, rather than network usage, guides the signaling process.This requires overdesign and overprovisioning to ensure a guaranteedminimal state regardless of both internal and external environmentalfactors.

Existing Capacity Management

Among the means used by the prior art to manage capacity are: (1) theuse of signal compression and decompression to manage signal density,permitting point-to-point capacity maximization over a given set oflinks by handling multiple-access channels wherein signals sent at onehigher, denser, frequency can be divided into a set of subordinatesignals sent at a set of lower frequencies, i.e. where a 10 MHz signalbecomes ten 1 MHz signals; (2) using multipath, multiple-antenna linksbetween given pairs of nodes with prior channel capacity estimation orenvironmental mensuration and eigenvalue decompositions of the signalsover the estimated channels; (3) using channel reciprocity in apoint-to-multipoint network with a set of presumed directive transmitweights pre-established for each node in said network; (4) in such achannel-reciprocity, point-to-multipoint network, pointing a signal beamin the direction of the intended recipient and guiding nulls in thedirections of unintended receivers, to reduce the unintended signal tothe level of the background noise; (5) in such a null-guiding network,directing maximal energy at the intended receiver and ignoring otherreceivers in the environment; (6) in such a null-guiding network, usingdirective and retrodirective beam forming between said point-to-pointconnections; (7) using point-to-point reciprocity for a given link; (8)using interference-whitened reciprocity between two nodes in apoint-to-point network; and, (9) using SINR maximization for eachparticular point-to-point link (10) using a training link in a dominantmode from one node to another to establish successive SINR maximizationat each end of that link; (11).

None of the above, however, have been applied to general multipoint tomultipoint, or to multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) network whichis dynamically responsive to environmental conditions, both those withinand external to the network, over all the nodes and potential linksamongst them. Once the nodes become capable of general multiple-outputand multiple-input signal processing, some particular further approacheshave been considered to increasing network capacity. These include SDMAand Multitone Transmission, as well as combinatorial coding schemes.

Spatial Separation of Signals

Spatial filtering techniques (separation of signals based on theirobserved spatial separation at transceivers) can be used to boostnetwork capacity in a variety of manners. Approaches used in prior artinclude reuse enhancement, in which fixed (e.g., sectorized antennaarrays) or adaptive (e.g., adaptive array processing) spatial filteringis used to reduce or control interference between centralizedtransceivers (e.g., BS's) and edge nodes (e.g., SU's) using thefrequency or time resource (e.g., time slot or frequency channel) indifferent cells of cellular PMP networks, thereby reducing thegeographical separation between those cells and therefore the frequencyreuse factor employed by the network; and space diversity multipleaccess (SDMA), in which a centralized transceiver uses spatial filteringto establish simultaneous links with multiple edge transceiversoperating on the same frequency or time resource in PMP or cellular PMPnetworks.

The SDMA transmission protocol involves the formation of directed beamsof energy, whose radiation patterns do not overlap with each other, tocommunicate with users at different locations. Adaptive antennae arrayscan be driven in phased patterns to simultaneously steer energy in thedirection of selected receivers. With such a transmission technique, theother multiplexing schemes can be reused in each of the separatelydirected beams. For example, in FDMA systems, the same frequency channelcan be used to link to two spatially separated nodes, using twodifferent spatially separated beams. Accordingly, if the beams do notoverlap each other, different users can be assigned the same frequencychannel as long as they can be uniquely identified by a specificbeam/channel combination.

The SDMA receive protocol involves the use of multi-element adaptiveantennae arrays to direct the receiving sensitivity of the array towardselected transmitting sources. Digital beamforming is used to processthe signals received by the adaptive antennae array and to separateinterference and noise from genuine signals received from any givendirection. For a receiving station, received RF signals at each antennaelement in the array are sampled and digitized. The digital basebandsignals then represent the amplitudes and phases of the RF signalsreceived at each antenna element in the array. Digital signal processing(DSP) techniques are then applied to the digital stream from eachantenna element in the array. The process of beamforming involves theapplication of weight values to the digital signals from each antennaelement (‘transmit weights’), thereby adjusting the numericalrepresentation of their amplitudes and phases such that, when addedtogether, they form the desired beam—i.e. the desired directionalreceive sensitivity. The beam thus formed is a digital representationwithin the computer of the physical RF signals received by the antennaearray from any given direction. The process of null steering at thetransmitter is used to position the spatial direction of null regions inthe pattern of the transmitted RF energy. The process of null steeringat the receiver is a DSP technique to control the effective direction ofnulls in the receiver's gain or sensitivity. Both processes are intendedto minimize inter-beam spatial interference. SDMA techniques usingmulti-element antennae arrays to form directed beams are disclosed inthe context of mobile communications in Swales, et. al., IEEE Trans.Veh. Technol. Vol. 39 No. 1 February, 1990 and in U.S. Pat. No.5,515,378, which also suggests combining various temporal and spectralmultiple-access techniques with spatial multiple access techniques. Thetechnical foundations for SDMA protocols using adaptive antennae arraysare discussed, for example, in the book by Litva and Lo entitled“Digital Beamforming in Wireless Communications”, Artech House, 1996.And in U.S. Pat. No. 5,260,068, Gardner and Schell suggest conjoining“spectrally disjoint” and “spatially separable” electromagnetic signalpatterns.

Also, in the work by Agee cited supra, at p. 72, the notes: “[s]patialdiversity can be exploited for any networking approach and modulationformat, by employing a multiport adaptive antenna array to separate thetime-coincident subscriber signals prior to the demodulation operation.”

In his above-referenced patents, Raleigh also mentions reuse enhancementmethods that use adaptive spatial filtering to reduce reuse factor of 2GFDMA-TDMA networks. Fixed (sectorized) spatial filtering is alsoemployed in 2G CDMA networks to increase the number of codes that can beused at BS's in the network.

When a transmitter communicates the transmit weights, the receiver canuse them to compare against the received signals to eliminateerroneously received spatially separated signals (i.e., reflections ofother spatial sector signals unintentionally received). The receiver canalso generate a set of ‘receive weights’ which indicate that DSPformulation which best recreated, out of the universe of receivedsignals from the multipath elements, the original signal as modified bythe now-known transmit weights (as differentiated from the signalmodified by the transmit path).

In U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276, Agee disclosed that not only can multipleantennae be used in a diversity scheme from a single transmittingantenna, but also that the receiving antennae need only as muchseparation as is necessary “to vary different multipath interferenceamongst the group. A separation of nominally ten wavelengths isgenerally needed to observe independent signal fading.” Although, asmobile wireless is moving up-frequency the wavelengths are shortening indirect inverse order, this ten-wavelength separation still imposed apractical limit. Most wireless communications networks today are stillworking in the 1-to-5 GHz range, where the single wavelengths measurebetween a meter and a decimeter. While a decimeter separation (3.937)could fit within the average size of a handheld cellular unit, a10-decimeter, or even a 10-meter, separation, would not. And fittingmultiple decimeter antennae requires, of course, even more separationspace between the antennae.

Spatial separation techniques, and in particular techniques based onfixed spatial filtering approaches, suffer from what may be called‘dynamic’ multipath. They can be substantively harmed by channelmultipath. Signal reflections may impinge on the spatially sensitivetransceiver from any and all directions, including directions oppositefrom the transceiver (e.g., due to structures on the far side of thetransceiver). These reflections can cause signals expected on one sectorto be injected into other sectors, causing undesired interference.Dealing with known and presumed multipath, and depending upon it, arenot the same as opportunistically using the optimal subset of potentialmultipaths, which is not part of these or other prior art.

Additional Diversity Available in a MIMO Environment

With multiple antennae at the transmitting and receiving end, threefurther diversity schemes become accessible. The first two are mentionedin U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276, those being angle-of-arrival andpolarization diversity. The third is spectral diversity, obtained byredundantly transmitting the signal data over multiple frequencychannels. In this approach, both the phase and amplitude of the carriercan be varied to represent the signal in multitone transmissions andM-ary digital modulation schemes. In an M-ary modulation scheme, two ormore bits are grouped together to form symbols and one of the M possiblesignals is transmitted during each period. Examples of M-ary digitalmodulation schemes include Phase Shift Keying (PSK), Frequency ShiftKeying (FSK), and higher order Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM). InQAM a signal is represented by the phase and amplitude of a carrierwave. In high order QAM, a multitude of points can be distinguished onan amplitude/phase plot. For example, in 64-ary QAM, 64 such points canbe distinguished. Since six bits of zeros and ones can take on 64different combinations, a six-bit sequence of data symbols can, forexample, be modulated onto a carrier in 64-ary QAM by transmitting onlyone value set of phase and amplitude out of the possible 64 such sets.

Varanesi cavalierly dismissed MIMO, his assessment being: “Whilemathematically elegant and sound, the critique of that general approachis that, in practical situations, one is usually not interested inover-achieving reception fidelity. It is sufficient to just meet aperformance specification. So rather than achieving that performancewithout overkill, the leftover is used to make the system more bandwidthefficient.” His patent also gives no consideration to either (a) networkeffects and how to attain them beneficially; and (b) using multi-userfeedback decision receivers (or obviously, multi-user feedback) anywherebut at BSs.

Various methods for obtaining signal diversity are known. Frequencydiversity is one of many diversity methods. The same modulation iscarried by several carrier channels separated by nominally the coherencebandwidth of each respective channel. In time diversity, the sameinformation is transmitted over different time slots.

Multiple antennas can be used in a spatial diversity scheme. Severalreceiving antennas can be used to receive the signals sent from a singletransmitting antenna. For best effect, the receiving antennas are spacedenough apart to vary different multipath interference amongst the group.A separation of nominally ten wavelengths is generally needed to observeindependent signal fading.

Signal diversity can be used when a signal has a bandwidth much greaterthan the coherence bandwidth of the channel, in a more sophisticateddiversity scheme. Such a signal with a bandwidth W can resolve themultipath components and provide the receiver with several independentlyfading signal paths. When a bandwidth W much greater than the coherencebandwidth of each respective channel is available to a user, the channelcan be subdivided into a number of frequency division multiplexedsub-channels having a mutual separation in center frequencies of atleast the coherence bandwidth of each respective channel. The samesignal can then be transmitted over the frequency-division multiplexsub-channels to establish frequency diversity operation. The same resultcan be achieved by using a wideband binary signal that covers thebandwidth W.

Other prior art diversity schemes have included angle-of-arrival orspatial diversity and polarization diversity. Many of these, and theprior art thereof, are referenced in U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276, B. G.Agee, “Stacked-Carrier discrete multiple tone communication technologyand combinations with code nulling, interference cancellation,retrodirective communication and adaptive antenna arrays”. In thatpatent, one of its main objectives was to provide a simple equalizationof linear channel multipath distortion; yet one of its principlelimitations is that it concentrates on point-to-multipoint communicationlinks: “But this technique is extended by the present invention topoint-to-point and point-to-multipoint communications where the intendedcommunicators, as well as the interferers, include stacked-carrierspread spectrum modulation formats.” Although U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276mentions multipoint-to-multipoint and point-to-point alternatives, itdoes not provide a unified approach for network MIMO management whichexploits advantageously the localization efforts of individual nodes.One key difference is that while in the present invention, any node maybe a transceiver for multiple inputs and multiple outputs, in U.S. Pat.No. 6,128,276 “A difference between the base station and the remote unitis that the base station transceives signals from multiple nodes, e.g.,multiple access. Each remote unit transceives only the single datastream intended for it. Channel equalization techniques and code nullingare limited methods for adapting the spreading and despreading weights.”Furthermore, unlike the present invention where the transmit and receiveweights are substantially the same and preferentially form a reciprocal,in U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276: “In general, the despreading weights areadjusted to maximize the signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR)of the despread baseband signals, e.g., estimated data symbols. Thistypically results in a set of code nulling despreading weights that aresignificantly different than the spreading gains used to spread thebaseband signals at the other ends of the link.” Additionally, thepreferred embodiment in U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,276 uses blind despreadingas it presumes that “the transmit spreading gains and channeldistortions are not known at the despreader”, whereas the presentinvention embodies symbol signaling to allow the spreading gains andchannel distortions to be known at each end of the link.

OFDM

With multitone transmission, Orthogonal Frequency Division MultiplexingOFDM) becomes more feasible from each node equipped with amulti-antennae array. There have been several problems in dynamicwireless electromagnetic communication networks implementing OFDM (whichinclude both those designed with static and mobile nodes, and thosedesigned with only static nodes that must adapt over time toenvironmental or network changes, additions, or removals). Theseproblems include intertone interference, windowing time constraints(generally requiring short windows), and inapplicability tomacrocellular, i.e. multi-cell, network deployment. One of the objectsof the present embodiment of the invention is to overcome these andother current OFDM problems in a MIMO environment.

DS-CDMA Problems

P. N. Monogioudis and J. M. Edmonds, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,550,810,identified several problems in Direct-Sequence, Code Division MultipleAccess approaches to resolving multipath and multiple transmitterconditions. n a DS-CDMA communication system a digital signal, forexample digitized speech or data, is multiplied by a coding sequencecomprising a pseudo-random sequence which spreads the energy in themodulating signal, which energy is transmitted as a spread spectrumsignal. At the receiver, the antenna signal is multiplied by the samepseudo-random sequence which is synchronized to the spreading sequencein order to recover the modulating signal. Due to multipath effectswhich will cause intersymbol interference, Rake combining is used toovercome these effects and to produce a modulating signal which can bedemodulated satisfactory.

In the case of a DS-CDMA communication system several different spreadspectrum signals having the same or different chip rams and transmittedsimultaneously at the same frequency by different users may be receivedat an antenna, each signal having been subject to different multipatheffects, a method of equalization which attempts to determine thechannel impulse response and invert it is not adequate. Amongst theproblems is what is known as the near-far effect due to signals fromtransmitters being received at a BS at different power levels. Thiseffect is overcome by the BSs having fast power control algorithms.

In order for a receiver to be able to adapt itself to differentconditions which may be found in practice, it must be able to cope withmultiple bit rates which are required by a multi-media serviceprovision, variations in the loading of the system, bit errordegradation that other users' interference causes and power controlfailure caused, for example, by near-far interference under severefading conditions.

They identify the information-theory source for that patent'sincorporated canceller for intersymbol interference, but note that:

-   -   “A problem with DS-CDMA is that there may be several different        simultaneous transmissions on the same frequency channel, which        transmissions may be asynchronous and at different bit rates.        Accordingly in order to approach the performance of a single        user it is not sufficient just to estimate the channel impulse        response and perform combining.”

Where they do consider MIMO it is only in the context of a single BSrecovering signals from several users; and because of the problems theyidentified above, mostly dismissed the MIMO approach, stating:

-   -   “For dealing with multi-user interference in DS-CDMA        transmissions, decision feedback equalizers are not good enough        because they do not obtain, and make use of, tentative decisions        obtained independently from the received transmissions.”

None of the prior art resolved a basic problem with wirelesscommunication, that the greater the power that goes into onetransmission the less capacity other transmissions may experience, forone person's signal is another person's noise. By approaching allwireless multipoint electromagnetic communications networks solely fromthe individual unit level, this conundrum continually represented abarrier.

Power vs. Capacity Conundrum

Ongoing power control for a wireless electromagnetic communicationsnetwork is the control of radiated power, as the communicationenvironment changes after initial communications between any two nodesis attained. The signal transmitted from one node to another becomespart of the environment, and thus part of the ‘noise’, for any othercommunication. Not only can such a signal interfere with othersimultaneous conversations between other, unrelated pairs of nodes inthe network, but it can also interfere with simultaneous conversationsbetween other nodes and the receiving (or even sending) node. Two typesof power control are necessary: initial power control (to establish aminimally acceptable communications channel or link between atransmitting and receiving node), and ongoing power control, toconstantly adapt the minimum level of power usage as the environmentchanges.

Power Consumption as a Second, Orthogonal Network Metric

Initial Power Control

Several communications protocols are known for cellular systems. Theserange from the Personal Handiphone System (PHS) and the Global Systemfor Mobile Communications (GSM), to the packet-switching TCP/IPprotocol, the new ‘BlueTooth’ limited range protocol, and a host ofpager-based protocols. All must manage the initialization between onenode and another, a problem that has plagued communications since theday Alexander Graham Bell's proposed ‘Hoi, Hoi!’ fought with Thomas A.Edison's “Hello”.

Similarly, the amount of power which must be used to establish theinitial link between any two nodes is only known to the extent that theenvironment (external and internal) is identical to previouslyestablished conditions. If no record of such conditions exist, eitherbecause the cost of storing the same information is too high, or becauseno such link has ever been made, or because an environmental differencehas already been detected, then the initial power allocation which mustbe made is uncertain. The higher the initial power used to establish alink, the greater that link's impact will be on other links and upon thereciprocal nodes at either end. At the high extreme the new link willdrown out all existing links, thereby degrading network capacity; at thelow extreme, the new link will not be discernible, thereby failing toestablish new capacity. Moderating the initial power over time, as linksare formed, broken, and reformed, currently requires good luck,insensitivity to environmental conditions and preference for ad-hocassertions, complex record maintenance, or increased effort at ongoingpower control. An approach of using power management and reciprocaltransmit weights, while it provides some adaptivity, fails to attain thecapacity and power management potential of full diversity utilization.

Ongoing Power Control

Ongoing power control is the control at the transmitter as thecommunication environment changes after the link amongst a set of nodesis achieved. for example, when radiated power at the sender is increasedfor the link between a sender and recipient(s), in order to achieve anacceptable quality for the received signal, such a change may degradeother signals at the same node(s) and in ‘nearby’ links. In addition, asconnections are constantly altering (nodes adding and subtractingsignals as content flows and halts), the power assignments may change,again affecting the environment of radiated signals. There is a range of‘acceptable’ signal, with the two extremes of ‘excess quality’ (implyingthat excess RF power is being used by the transmitter), and‘unacceptable quality’ (implying that inadequate RF power is being usedby the transmitter. Variations in propagation characteristics,atmospherics, and man-made interference (e.g., respectively,transmission hardware operational fluctuations, lightning, and noisyspark plugs in vehicles around the node) can also require the adjustmentof the RF power levels.

The environmental changes that must be adapted to, and may require powerchanges in the transmission, may be changes external to the network.These can come from broad, general changes in the weather, particularand local changes in the immediate environment of a node (such as humanor animal interaction with an antenna or the electromagnetic signal),changes in background interference, or particular and transient changesin complex environments which contain mobile elements that can affecttransmissions, such as moving vehicles or airplanes passing through thesignal space.

Other environmental changes that must be adapted to, and may requirepower changes in the transmission, may be changes internal to thenetwork. These can include the addition (or dropping) of other unrelatedsignals between disparate links which affect the capacity attainable bythe sending and receiving link, the addition (or dropping) of othersignals between the receiving node and other nodes, or the addition (ordropping) of other signals between the sending node and other nodes.

Objective of Power Control

The objective of power control, especially of ongoing power control, isto minimize the power transmitted at each node in the network, to alloweach node to achieve a desired level of performance over each link inthe network, e.g., to attain a ‘target’signal-to-interference-plus-noise (SINR) ratio for every link in thenetwork. Such a power control method is referred to herein as a globallyoptimizing power control method. If a method is designed solely tooptimize the SINR ratio at some subset of the network (e.g. a particularnode, or a sub-set of nodes), then it is referred to herein as a locallyoptimizing power control method.

The problem has been that any globally optimizing power control methodrequires either impractical availability of hardware at each node, orunacceptably high communication of overhead control data to manage theentire network. Solutions have been proposed for a number of particularsub-sets of communications protocols, hardware, or systems, but nonehave resolved both the overhead vs. content and power vs. capacityconundrums both locally and globally.

A method for power control is disclosed in “Power Control With SignalQuality Estimation For Smart Antenna Array Communication Systems”, PCTInternational Application PCT/US/02339, which is a continuation-in-partof U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/729,387. This application usesparticularized power assignments for each link rather than a globalpower capacity target, and, in focusing entirely on managing the powervs. capacity conundrum, does not address the overhead vs. contentconundrum.

Similarly, Farrokh Rashid-Farrokhi, Leandros Tassiulas, and K. J. RayLiue proposed a theoretical approach to power management usinglink-by-link, or link-based, SINR performance metrics. (See, FarrokhRashid-Farrokhi, Leandros Tassiulas, and K. J. Ray Liu, “Joint optimalpower control and beamforming in wireless networks using antennaarrays,” IEEE Transactions on Communications, vol. 46, pp. 1313-1324,1998; Farrokh Rashid-Farrokhi, K. J. Ray Liu, and Leandros Tassiulas,“Transmit beamforming and power control for cellular wireless systems,”IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, vol. 16, pp.1437-1450, 1998. The prior art did not address either MIMO channels ormultipoint networks, chiefly considered fixed SINR constraints ratherthan dynamically adaptive network constraints. And failed to addressreal-world QoS requirements for individual subscribers in the network.Since a user can generally be connected to the network over multiplechannels, multipath modes, and even be connected to multiple nodes inthe network, a more realistic requirement would be to consider the totalinformation rate into or out of a given node. This fundamental issue cannot be addressed by the prior art, but is addressed by the LEGO concept.The suite of LEGO techniques can also address other network optimizationcriterion that can be more appropriate for some networks. In particularthe max-min capacity optimization criterion and its related offshootspermit the network to maximize its capacity performance based on currentchannel conditions and traffic conditions. This can be particularlyimportant for high-speed networks, or networks that are required toprovide high rate CBR services, since these networks can easily consumeall the available capacity that the network can provide, subject to thetransmitter power constraints. The prior art, on the other hand,requires fixed, link by link performance goals in their optimizationcriteria.

Because capacity and power interact with each other within a wirelesscommunications network, any approach to network optimization mustaddress the system-wide and dynamic interplay between these two,orthogonal, metrics. Optimization that focuses solely on the environmentfor each particular node in the network, just as much as optimizationthat focuses solely on the global internodal environment, creates therisk of unbalanced and less-than-optimal results, and weakens thedynamic stability of the network in changing environments.

Distributed Networks and Dynamic Channel Structures

Distributed networks, where any particular node may both receive andtransmit data from any other node, pose many advantages over the PMP andcellular PMP networks designed around centralizing hubs. The Internet isone of the principal examples of a new distributed network, though abroad range of other application areas for such are opening out. Thereis an explosive demand for broadband, mobile, and portable data servicesvia both wired and wireless networks to connect conventional untetheredplatforms (handsets, laptops, PDAs) with other untethered, or transientor transitory, platforms (cell phones, inventory or shipping tags,temporary service connections). In all of these applications,distributed networks can provide strong advantages over conventionalsystems, by exploiting the inherent advantages of connectionless dataservice, or by reducing the power required to communicate amongstuntethered platforms, at data rates competitive with tethered devices.

Distributed networks also provide multiple advantages in militaryapplications, including collection, analysis, andcollation/dissemination of reconnaissance data from beyond the frontline of troops (FLOT); intruder detection and location behind the FLOTand rear echelons. By allowing data transfer through nearby nodes andover ‘flat’ network topologies, particularly dynamic networks where thechannels change according to the context and presence or absence ofparticular nodes, distributed networks can reduce an adversary's abilityto identify, target, incapacitate, or even detect high priority nodes inthe network greatly enhancing the security and survivability relative toconventional point-to-multipoint networks.

Analogous advantages accrue to security applications or to logisticalmanagement systems, where opposition may be either criminal activity ornatural disasters (blizzards, floods, warehouse or other fires). One keyelement of any multipoint to multipoint approach is that channels ofcommunication between any particular pair of nodes may change over timein response to the environment, said environment including both theexternal natural environment and the internal environment of the samenetwork's continually shifting functions and data streams.

Moreover, this invention is concerned with the problems described below.

Problems Forming the Opportunity for the Invention

The primary problem solved through the invention is communication ofshort, intermittent packets, in particular Voice over IP (VoIP)communication signals, over communication networks subject tosignificant time-and-frequency co-incident (“co-channel”) interferencefrom other network users and external emissions, A secondary problemsolved through the invention is efficient physical routing of packetsover multiple network nodes, e.g., using multihop relay techniques, inorder to improve rate, robustness (immunity to interference andinformation warfare measures), reliability, and availability ofcommunications between Source and Destination nodes in the network. Atertiary problem solved through the invention is means for rapidconfiguration and scalability of transceiver capabilities in highlydynamic environments where the density and severity of interferers,numbers and capabilities/requirements of communication nodes, and natureof channel propagation may change rapidly and dynamically betweencommunication opportunities and/or over the course of a singlecommunication opportunity.

Advantages of the Invention

The invention provides the following capabilities and advantages:

-   -   Common, scalable transceiver blocks that can be implemented at        individual nodes in the communication network (allowing phased        addition of hardware and software without immediately rendering        obsolete the previous infrastructure).    -   Integration into a signal's waveform structure (“overhead        structure”) of overhead bits associated with point-to-point        links in the network, e.g., Transmit and Receive Node Addresses        (TNA's and RNA's), and then use of the resulting unified        waveform structure both to securely identify nodes attempting to        communicate with a receiver, and to develop linear combiner        weights that can extract those signals from co-channel        interference incident on that receiver (including interference        from other nodes attempting to communicate with that receiver).        This approach thereby eliminates bits needed for transmission of        TNA and RNA in headers attached to data packets transmitted over        each link in the network, as well as overhead needed for        transmission of pilot tones/sequences, training signals,        preambles/midambles, Unique Words, etc., typically used to train        receivers in the network; thus reducing the transmission        overhead and improving information-transmission efficiency.    -   Ability to further exploit overhead structure to increase        transmit power and data rate, or to allow same-rate        communication at reduced power to nodes in the network, thereby        regaining link capacity lost by that overhead structure, with        the most capacity regained at low receive        signal-to-interference-and-noise-ratio (SINR).    -   Optional integration of overhead hits associated with multipoint        routes in the network, e.g., Source and Destination Node        Addresses (SNA's and DNA's) into the waveform structure used for        adaptation of the communication transceivers (“overhead        structure”), further reducing bits needed for transmission of        SNA and DNA in headers attached to data packets transmitted in        multihop networks, and allowing the use of macrodiverse relay        networks in which data is coherently transmitted over multiple        geographically separated nodes in a network.    -   Rapid (single packet) node detection/discovery and join/leave        algorithms, allowing individual transceivers to enter or exit        the network quickly to exchange traffic, update security codes,        etc., and to allow rapid and/or ad hoc configuration of the        network as users encounter dynamic changes in multipath, fading,        or interference.    -   Information assurance (IA) measures, e.g., antijamming and        antispoofing capability, at the node and network level,        including spreading means that defeat denial-of-service measures        in which the frequencies and/or time periods containing        synchronization and training bits are selectively jammed by an        adversary.    -   Adaptive power management and cyclic feature reduction at node,        link, and network levels, in order to minimize transmitted power        and/or detectable features of emitters in the network.    -   Extreme low complexity (<200 kcps DSP software operations, <30        Mcps ASIC or FPGA coreware operations) for communications        commensurate with VoIP communication, allowing maintenance of a        collaborative networking information commensurate with        pedestrian networking applications.

Collaborative communication applications that can be additionallyhandled by these transceivers include the following:

-   -   Distributed Kalman state circulation to enable wide-baseline        network geolocation algorithms.    -   Internode channel measurement and range/timing/carrier offset        estimation algorithms used to enable wide-baseline network        geolocation algorithms.    -   Collaborative interference avoidance methods during transmission        and reception operations, e.g., allowing wide-area        communications in presence of jammers in military communication        systems, or incumbent broadcast emitters in commercial        communication systems (e.g., 802.22).    -   Collaborative communication over long-range to out-of-theatre        nodes, e.g., reachback nodes in military communication networks,        or LEO/MEO/GEO satellites in commercial satellite communication        networks.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention is depicted in the Figures below.

FIG. 1 illustrates a Point-To-Point or PTP network; each pentagonindicates a node, or transmission and reception (a.k.a. transceiver)station, and each arrow indicates a link along which communication flowsbetween nodes.

FIG. 2 illustrates a Point-To-Multipoint network. The large pentagonindicates a Base Station (BS) capable of communicating with manyindividual Subscriber Units (SU), indicated by the small pentagons.

FIGS. 3A and 3B each illustrate a more complex PMP network with multipleBS and SU nodes, and multiple links. The solid lines indicate onediversity channel and the dotted lines a second diversity channel.

FIG. 4 illustrates a multipath environment, where a single BS with acomplex antenna radiates multiple beams to a single SU (the car),wherein the beams also arrive from reflections off the surroundingfeatures.

FIG. 5 illustrates a null-steering effort by a single node (Item 101),possessing at least three antennae, which is capable of directingtowards two unintended recipients (Item 102) null transmissions (Item105) and directing a focused beam (Item 104) towards an intendedrecipient (Item 103).

FIG. 6A illustrates a more complex multipoint network, where the BSscommunicate with each other and with individual SUs, even if a BS to BSlink may risk interfering with communications between the BSs and aparticular SU.

FIG. 6B illustrates a more effective use of the existing diversity ofchannels, whereby the BS to BS signal passes through a (possiblemultiplicity of) channel(s) from one BS to the intervening SUs thence tothe second BS.

FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrate a capacity problem that may arise with aprior art PMP network when a new node attempts to enter and existingnodes are not capable of dynamically adapting diversity channels to formthe new subsets. Although nodes C and E can readily talk with D, bysubstituting their direct link to each other for intervening links withD, nodes D, A, and B, being limited to 3 existing channels, cannot adaptto connect with each other by dropping either E or C depending ontraffic needs.

FIG. 8 illustrates a Time-Division Duplex communications protocol,whereby alternating uplink and downlink, or transmission and reception,slices of network activity take place at a node.

FIG. 9 illustrates an asymmetric network where nodes C and D havegreater capacity than nodes A and B, which in turn have greater capacitythan node D, but where the network cannot dynamically allocate thiscapacity to meet signal density needs to differing subsets of nodes.

FIG. 10 illustrates a multipath network, where transmissions betweennode 1 and node 2 are both direct and reflected off environmentalfeatures both near and far.

FIG. 11 illustrates a data flow diagram in a PTP MIMO link, where signalflows from one CODEC in node 2 through all of node 2's antennae, thenceinto all of node 1's antennae, and finally into one CODEC of node 1.Existing multipath potential of either or both reflectors, and dynamicallocation of less or more of the possible diversity modes, is ignored.

FIG. 12 illustrates a physical PTP multipath, consisting of one directand two reflective links using all of node 1's antennae andtransceivers, and all of node 2's antennae and receivers.

FIG. 13A illustrates a network of MIMO-capable nodes, that is, nodeswith multiple antennae, multitone transceivers with DSP capability (FIG.13B), wherein the network has two subsets with preferentially reciprocaluplinks and downlinks and diversity channel capacity between thesubsets.

FIG. 14 illustrates MIMO-capable nodes wherein each node transmits andreceives signal energy during alternating time slots (or sequences oftime slots in TDD-TDMA systems).

FIG. 15 illustrates more details of the MIMO-capable node, including onthe receiving side: receiving spatially and/or polarization diverseantennae in a multiple antennae array (Item 110), a vector OFDMtransceiver switch (Item 112), a LNA bank (Item 113), an AGC (hem 114),a Frequency translator (Item 115), a LOs ((Item 116), an ADC bank (Item117), a MultiTone Demodulator Bank (Item 118), means for mappingreceived data over each diversity channel, on each frequency channel andreceive time slot (Item 119), and a transceiver controller (Item 120);and including on the transmitting side means for mapping transmitteddata for each frequency channel and transmit time slot (Item 121), aMultiTone Modulator bank (Item 122), a DAC bank (Item 123), thetransceiver switch, a PA bank (Item 124), and transmitting spatiallyand/or polarization diverse antennae in a multiple antennae array (Item125) which may be distinct from those used in receiving (Item 110).

FIG. 16 illustrates a MIMO-capable network of the preferred embodiment,wherein an originating transceiver Node 2 in an uplink transmit set(Item 200) distributes a signal through multiple antennae (Items 204Aand 204B), which goes over the channel matrix of diversity channelsavailable (Items 206A, B, C, and D to a uplink receive set node, whichreceives the signals over its multiple antennae and combines them (Items208A and B) to the desired recipient (Item 202); leaving all othertransmissions and channel diversity available (Item 212) for othernetwork communications.

FIG. 17 illustrates a PTP MIMO node layout employing TDD, but one usinga guard-time prefix (Item 220) and a 10 ms content frame period (Item222), where the uplink Tx for Node 2 is at the time for the Uplink Rxfor Node 1.

FIG. 18 illustrates a MIMO network in a star topology, where the uplinkrelay node (Node 1, Set 2) talks to 4 edge nodes (Nodes 1-4, set 1) withdistinct channels for uplinks and downlinks.

FIG. 19 illustrates a complex network topology with multiple BSs (Items260, 262), SUs (Items 264, 266, 268, and 270), and a potentiallyinterfering non-network node (Item 275), with transmissions amongst thenetwork (280, 282, 284, 290, 292) competing with transmissions fromoutside the network which are perceived as interference at BS 1 (Item260) and SU1 (Item 270).

FIG. 20 illustrates a MIMO network in a ring configuration withreciprocity at the network level.

FIG. 21 illustrates the means for generating the pilot tone mask withnetwork code mask pseudodelay (Item 170), originating node index maskelement (Item 172), and Recipient node index mask element (Item 174)being combined by two element-wise MUX units (Items 176, 178), to createthe final pilot tone signal (Item 180).

FIG. 22 illustrates a time-frequency mapping pattern of an acquisitionchannel (Item 340, 342), control channel (Item 344), 32 Data channels(Item 346, not shown for D1 through D31), with cyclic prefixes (Items322, 318, 31.4) and a guard time (Item 310) with 100 μs acquisitionsymbols (Item 320), control symbols (Item 316), and then 32 data symbols(Item 312, again not shown for D1-D31).

FIG. 23 illustrates an alternative time-frequency mapping pattern forhigh-mobility situations, where the acquisition, control, and dataelements are repeated (Items 362, 366, and 370), but the number ofdata-bearing channels is halved to allow the duplication within the samebandwidth and time.

FIG. 24 illustrates one embodiment of the MIMO transceiver, with the RFfeeds (Item 130), the Frequency channel bank (Item 132), the mappingelement (Item 134), the Multilink Rx weight adaptation algorithm (Item136), the Multilink diversity Rx weights combining element (Item 138),the equalization algorithm (Item 140) and Delay/ITI/pilot gating removalbank (Item 142), symbol decoder bank (Item 144), multimode powermanagement, symbol coding assignment algorithm element (Item 146), thesynchronization elements (Items 162, 164), and T/R comp. Algorithm (Item156) and element (Item 158), and multilink diversity distribution of TxGains element (Item 152).

FIG. 25 illustrates in more detail the frequency translator, detailingthe Band Pass Filters, element wise multiplier, sinusoids, SAW BPF, andLPF elements.

FIGS. 26 and 27 illustrate tone-mapping to frequency bins approaches forlow and high mobility situations, respectively.

FIG. 28 illustrates in more detail the implementation of the Delay/ITIpreemphasis, pilot-gating bank, tying the details of FIG. 21 into themapping element (Item 474), the Trellis encryption and encoding element(Item 472), the pilot signal and information signal MUX (Item 480),leading to the final Tx data symbols signals (Item 490).

FIGS. 29 and 30 illustrate the antennae feeds (502, 512) acrossdiversity modes and multilinks through the Multilink AdaptationAlgorithm element (500) to and from the Link and multitone symboldistributor/combiner inputs and outputs (506, 508; and 516, 518respectively).

FIG. 31 illustrates the incorporation of the preferred embodiment of theMultilink LEGO gain adaptation algorithm and element (Item 530) into thediversity combining and distribution elements of the MIMO transceiverhardware.

FIG. 32 illustrates the LEGO optimization function for a target capacityobjective β.

FIG. 33 illustrates the network LEGO optimization function for a networkcontroller, using constraint R_(1q) and target objective β, to determinefor the network or node which should be incremented or decremented.

FIG. 34 illustrates two nodes using dynamic, feedback driven informationfrom transmissions and receptions to perform a particular LEGOoptimization, involving observed interference power from non-subset ornon-network BSs (528) or SUs (580).

FIGS. 35 and 36 illustrate the FFT-based LS algorithm used in thepreferred embodiment that adapt {w₁ (k, l; n₂, n₁)} and {w₂ (k, l; n₁,n₂)} to values that minimize the mean-square error (MSE) between thecombiner output data and a known segment of transmitted pilot data.

FIG. 37 illustrate the FFT-based LS algorithm used in the preferredembodiment for the normalized MMSE or, in an alternative embodiment, theGauss-Newton algorithm.

FIGS. 38A and 38B illustrate a MIMO network with null-steering andpilot-tone transmissions, with the overall transmission shown as theExtraction SINR, and the mask-fitted transmissions perceived at 702A and702B which correctly account through the imposed pilot pseudodelay forthe intended transmission peaks.

FIGS. 39 and 40 illustrate alternative topological layouts for properuplink receive and uplink transmit subsets with links and expectedattenuation.

FIG. 41 illustrates, for a TDD MIMO network as in the preferredembodiment, an algorithm for any node entering the network.

FIG. 42 shows MIMO-capable hardware transceiver means for, and theprocessing steps performed, in the baseline two-channel transceiver usedin the invention.

FIG. 43 shows enhanced MIMO-capable hardware means for, and theprocessing steps in combining, baseline two-channel transceivers toprovide additional degrees of freedom (receive combining and transmitdistribution) in larger networks.

FIG. 44 shows an exemplary MIMO networking routing scenario in whichfour transceivers with four spatial degrees of freedom are used to routedata around a four-node network in the presence of a strong jammer.

FIG. 45 shows the baseline symbol and timing structure for eachtransmission, when transceivers are operated in a symmetrictime-division duplex (TDD) multinode network.

FIG. 46 shows an exemplary deployment and instantiation of the inventionin a communication over a TDD mesh network topology

FIG. 47 shows the baseline symbol and timing structure for eachtransmission, when transceivers are operated in a ad-hoc multinodenetwork.

FIG. 48 shows an exemplary deployment and instantiation of the inventionin a communication over an ad hoc mesh network topology.

FIG. 49 shows multiport PHY transmit operations and processing performedat transceivers using the invention.

FIG. 50 shows multiport PHY receive operations and processing performedat transceivers using the invention.

FIG. 51 shows multiport PHY receive adaptation operations and processingperformed in the primary embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 52 shows receive packet detection, address association, and linkSINR estimation processing performed in the preferred embodiment of theinvention.

FIG. 53 describes transmit adaptation algorithms operations andprocessing performed in the preferred embodiment of the invention.

OBJECTS

Resolving many of the prior art's weaknesses by enabling true,opportunistic. MIMO networks is one of the principle objects of theinvention. Creating a truly adaptive, flexible, multi-protocol wirelesselectromagnetic communications network is a second of the principleobjects of the invention. A third is to simultaneously resolve theinterplay between transmission power and network capacity by consideringand using the interplay between one local node's transmissions as asignal and other nodes' reception of the same as either a signal (if thereceiving node is an intended target) or as environmental noise (if thereceiving node is an unintended target).

A secondary objective under this third objective is to provide methodswhich improve signal quality received by a targeted recipient node whilesimultaneously reducing interference energy received by other untargetedrecipient nodes, so as to enable improved capacity amongst existingnodes, adding more nodes, increasing coverage area, and improvingcommunications quality, or any sub-combination thereof.

Another secondary objective under this third objective is to provide anadaptive method which accounts for multipath interaction amongst thenodes and network, and minimizes unwanted effects while maximizingpotential useful effects thereof.

Another secondary object under this is to provide improved loadbalancing amongst nodes and communication paths or links within thenetwork with a minimum of overall control.

Another secondary object under this is to enable improved access to newnodes to the network.

Another secondary object under this is to enable multiple, competing,yet cooperating sub-networks that are mutually and automaticallyadaptive and responsive.

A second of the principal objects of the invention is to simultaneouslyresolve the interplay between local optimization, which demands detailedconsideration of the immediate environmental details that affect eachlink between that node and others over which communications are flowing,and global optimization, which demands a minimum of control informationbe exchanged across the network and amongst the nodes in lieu ofotherwise usable signal capacity.

A secondary object under this is to use the reception of signalinformation from other nodes, both those targeting the recipient andthose not targeting the recipient, to enhance both reception andtransmission quality to and from the receiving node while minimizing theexplicit and separate feedback signals that must be exchanged amongstthe nodes and network.

Another secondary object under this is to provide methods foroptimization that can use or be independent of antenna array geometry,array calibration, or explicit feedback control signals from othernodes, whether the same are continuous, regular, or reactive toenvironmental changes affecting the link between the receiving node andthe other nodes.

A third of the principal objects of the invention is to maximize thecommunications capacity and minimize the power usage both locally andglobally across the network for any given set of hardware, software, andprotocols.

A secondary object under this is to provide higher content throughput inunderloaded networks, thereby providing faster perceived access orusage.

A secondary object under this is to provide higher reliability for anygiven hardware and software implementation.

A fourth of the principal objects of the invention is to provide amethod for network optimization that can be extended to mixed networks,whether such mixing is amongst wireless and fixed links, or amongstelectromagnetic spectra, or amongst types of nodes (BSs, dumb terminals,single- or limited-purpose appliances, or human-interactiveinput/output), and across both access schema and communicationsprotocols with a minimum of particularization.

A fifth of the principal objects of the invention is to providerelatively simple and powerful methods for approximation which enableimprovement that rapidly converges to the best solution for anyoptimization.

A secondary object under this is to provide a computationally efficientmechanization for cross-correlation operations that takes maximaladvantage of multiport signals on particular single channels.

A sixth of the principle objects of the invention is to maximize the useof local information and minimize the use of global information that isrequired for approximation and approach to the best solution for anyoptimization.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) network approach summarizedhere can incorporate as lesser, special cases, point-to-point links,point-to-multipoint networks, and disjoint (e.g., cellular)point-to-point links and point-to-multipoint networks. It can also beapplied to spatial, temporal, or frequency-based access schemes (SDMA,TDMA, FDMA) employing combinations of spectral, temporal, spatial orpolarization diversity, and to fixed, mixed, and mobile communications,as its focus is on the network in context rather than on the signaldifferentiation methodology, access determinations, or basing structure.One key to this approach is employment of spatially (or more generallydiversity) adaptive transmit and receive processing to substantivelyreduce interference in general multipoint links, thereby optimizingcapacity and/or other measures of network quality in multiply connectednetworks. A second key to this approach is the minimization of secondaryconsequences of signaling, and a second is using internalized feedback,so that the signaling process itself conveys information crucial to theoptimization. Rapid, dynamic, adaptation reactive to the changingenvironment and communications within and surrounding each node and theentire network is used to promote both local and global efficiency.Unlike Varanesi, the feedback is neither limited to BSs only, noreffectively independent of the continual, real-world, signal and networkenvironmental adaptation.

Instead of avoiding diversity, or fighting diversity, the presentembodiment of the invention exploits and makes use of spectral,temporal, polarization, and spatial diversity available at each node, aswell as and route (location based) diversity provided over the networkof nodes. The network of nodes uses MIMO-capable nodes, that is, nodeswith multiple antennae, multitone transceivers and preferentiallyreciprocal uplinks and downlinks (FIG. 13A and FIG. 13B). In thepreferred embodiment each node transmits and receives signal energyduring alternating time slots (or sequences of time slots in TDD-TDMAsystems) (FIG. 14); has a spatially and/or polarization diversemultiple-antenna array, a vector OFDM transceiver that downconverts, A/Dconverts, and frequency channelizes data induced on each antenna (orother diversity channel) during receive time slots, and inversechannelizes, D/A converts, and upconverts data intended for each antenna(or diversity channel) during transmit time slots; linearly combinesdata received over each diversity channel, on each frequency channel andreceive time slot; redundantly distributes data intended for eachdiversity channel, on each frequency channel and transmit time slots;and computes combiner and distributor weights that exploit the,narrowband, MIMO channels response on each frequency channel and timeslot (FIG. 15).

The concept of a ‘diversity channel’ is introduced to permit adistinction to be made between “channels” that data is redundantlydistributed across during receive (or transmit) operations, from“channels” that data is transported over (e.g., frequency channels ortime slots). Data is redundantly transported over diversity channels,i.e., the same data is transported on each diversity channel withweighting determined by the methods described in detail below, whileindependent data is generally transported over the second flavor ofchannel. Effectively exploiting available diversity dimensions, thepresent embodiment of the invention can maximize its ability to attainRank 2 capacities, since multiple redundant transmissions can be madeover the plurality resources, whether that plurality comes fromdifferent frequencies, multipaths, time slots, spatially separableantennae, or polarizing antennae. This is distinct from prior onapproaches which required multiple redundant transmissions over aplurality of frequencies to attain Rank 2 capacities. Because the signalflow between nodes is not limited to a particular dimension ofsubstantive differentiation the preferred embodiment of the network canat every point in time, and for every node in the network, exploit anyand all diversity opportunities practicable and attainable for thenetwork's communication channels.

The signal flow between the multiplicity of nodes in the networkcomprises a multiplicity of information channels, emanating from andbeing received by a set of antennae at each node (FIG. 16). The physicalchannel flow in a network with M(n) diversity channels (e.g., M(n)antennae per node, at each node n in the network) means that for eachtransmitting node's pair of antennae, as many as M distinguishablereceptions are feasible at each receiving node it can communicate with(FIG. 15, M=4, for a PTP example).

The preferred embodiment performs complex digital signal manipulationthat includes a linear combining and linear distribution of the transmitand receive weights, the generation of piloting signals containingorigination and destination node information, as well asinterference-avoiding pseudorandom delay timing (FIG. 17), and bothsymbol and multitione encoding, to gain the benefit of substantiveorthogonality at the physical level without requiring actual substantiveorthogonality at the physical level.

The network is designed such that a subset of its nodes are MIMO-capablenodes, and that each such node can simultaneously communicate with up toas many nodes in its field of view as it has antennae. The network isfurther designed such that it comprises two or more proper subsets, eachproper subset containing members who cannot communicate directly withother members of the same proper susbset. So if the network containedonly two proper subsets, First and Second, the members of First couldtransmit only to, and receive only from, the members of Second, and themembers of Second could transmit only to, and receive only from, themembers of First. Independent information is then transmitted from everymember of First and is independently processed by each member of Second.(See FIG. 18, exemplifying one such topology, a ‘Star’ topology; andFIG. 19, exemplifying another such topology.)

A non-MIMO-capable node may belong to any subset containing at least onecapable node that has at least one antenna available to thatnon-MIMO-capable node that has the non-MIMO-capable node in its field ofview.

Diversity channels, rather than antennae, limits the number of non-setmembers a MIMO-capable node may communicate with simultaneously, thatis, the number with which it may hold time/frequency coincidentcommunications. Also, this limiting number is a function of number ofusers attempting to communicate over the same diversity channels—userson different time-frequency channels do not affect this limit. Thusanode with 128 time frequency channels (8 TDMA time slots×16 FDMAfrequency channels) and a 4 antennas (4 diversity channels pertime-frequency channel) can support up to 4×128=512 links, to as manyusers. If the internode channel response to a given user has rank 1(e.g., if antennas are on same polarization and multipath is absent),then only a single link can be established to that user on eachtime-frequency channel, e.g., 128 separate links (one on eachtime-frequency channel) in the example given above. Higher internodechannel rank allows more channels to be established; for example ifnodes are polarization diverse, then the internode channel response hasrank 2 and 256 channels (2 per time-frequency channel) can beestablished. The MIMO channel response equation determines power on eachchannel—depending on needs of network and pathloss to user, some or mostof channels nominally available may be turned off to optimize theoverall network capacity.

A significant element is that the diversity channel distribution neednot be equal; one recipient node may have half the channels, if thetraffic density requires it, while the transmitting node may divide itsremaining channels evenly amongst the remaining nodes. Therefore themore users that have rank 2 or better capacity, the greater theavailable channels for those who have only capacity 1. This supportsincremental optimization as improvement for the network is not dependentupon global replacement of every lesser-capacity node, but results fromany local replacement.

The preferred embodiment details the means for handling the twoalternative cases where the interference is, or is not, spatially whitein both link directions, the means for handling interference that istemporally white over the signal passband. Preferentially, each link inthe network possesses reciprocal symmetry, such that:H ₁₂(k;n ₁ ,n ₂)=H ^(T) ₂₁(k;n ₂ ,n ₁),  EQ. 1Where H₁₂ (k;n₁,n₂) is the M₁(n₂)×M₂(n₁) MIMO transfer function for thedata downlinked from node 1 to node 2 over channel k, less possibleobserved timing and carrier offset between uplink and downlink paths,and,

-   H₂₁(k;n₂,n₁) is the M₂(n₂)×M₁(n₁) MIMO transfer function for the    data uplink from node 2 to node 1 over channel k, and where ( )^(T)    denotes the matrix transpose operation,

In the preferred embodiment, this is effected by using the TDD protocol,and by sharing antennas during transmit and receive operations andperforming appropriate transceiver calibration and compensation toremove substantive differences between transmit and receive systemresponses (this can include path gain-and-phase differences after thetransmit/receive switch, but does not in general require compensation of[small] unequal observed timing and carrier offset between uplink anddownlink paths). However, simplex, random-access packet, and otheralternative methods are also disclosed and incorporated herein.

The network is further designed such that at each MIMO-capable node nwith M(n) antennae, no more than M(n) other actively transmitting nodesare in node n's field of view, enabling node n to effect a substantivelynull-steering solution as part of its transmissions, such that each nodebelonging to a downlink receive set can steer independent nulls to everyuplink receive node in its field of view during transmit and receiveoperations, and such that each node belonging to an uplink receive setcan steer independent nulls to every downlink receive node in its fieldof view during transmit and receive operations.

The preferred embodiment also has means for incorporation of pilot dataduring transmission operations, and means for computationally efficientexploitation of that pilot data during subsequent reception operations.This is to enable transmitting nodes to unambiguously direct informationto intended recipient nodes in the network; to enable receiving nodes tounambiguously identify information intended for them to receive; toenable nodes to rapidly develop substantively null-steering receiveweights that maximize the signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR)attainable by the link, to enable nodes to reject interference intendedfor other nodes in the network, to enable nodes to remove effects ofobserved timing offset in the link, and to enable the nodes and networkto develop quality statistics for use in subsequent decoding, errordetection, and transmit power management operations.

The preferred embodiment prefers a network designed to create andsupport a condition of network reciprocity, where the uplink anddownlink criteria are reciprocal at the network level. (FIG. 19). Thepresent form of the invention further exploits the reciprocity to attainboth local and global optimization, of both capacity and power, throughlocally enabled global optimization of the network (LEGO).

LEGO is enabled by exploiting substantive reciprocity of the internodechannel responses, together with appropriate normalization of transmitpower measures, to design uplink and downlink network quality metricsD₂₁(W₂, G₁) and D₁₂(W₁, G₂) that satisfy network reciprocity property:D ₁₂(W,G)=D ₂₁(G*,W*)  EQ. 2where (W₂,G₁) and (W₁,G₂) represent the receive and transmit weightsemployed by all nodes in the network during uplink and downlinkoperations, respectively. If equation 1 holds, then equal networkquality can be achieved in each link direction by setting G₁=W₁* andG₂=W₂*, such that each node use the receive combiner weights as transmitdistribution weights during subsequent transmission operations, i.e.,the network is preferentially designed and constrained such that eachlink is substantially reciprocal, such that the ad hoc network capacitymeasure can be made equal in both link directions by setting at bothends of the link:g ₂(k,q)∝w ₂*(k,q) and g ₁(k,q)∝w ₁*(k,q)

where {g₂(k,q), w₁(k,q)} are the linear transmit and receive weights totransmit data d₂(k,q) from node n₂(q) to node n₁(q) over channel k inthe downlink, and where {g₁(k,q), w₂(k,q)} are the linear transmit andreceive weights used to transmit data d₁(k,q) from node n₁(q) back tonode n₂(q) over equivalent channel k in the uplink; thereby allowing Eq.1 to be satisfied for such links.

The invention further iteratively optimizes network quality (as definedby D₁₂ and D₂₁) over multiple frames, by first adapting combiner weightsto locally optimize link (and therefore network) performance duringreceive operations, and then using Eq. 1A and the reciprocity property(Eq. 1) to further optimize network quality in the reverse directionover subsequent transmit operations.

The invention further improves on this approach by using Eq. 1 to scaleeach transmit vector, based on a partial linearization of the networkquality metrics, to either minimize the total transmit power in theentire network subject to a network quality constraint, preferentiallycapacity, or maximize network quality, preferentially capacity, subjectto a total transmit power constraint. This constraint is defined andmanaged as a control parameter that is updated by the network. The totaltransmit power at a given node is then reported as an output to thenetwork.

By using target criteria such as (1) for a cellular network, a max-mincapacity criterion subject to a power constraint, or (2) for a wirelessLAN, a max-sum capacity that is subject to a power constraint, and usingsimple comparative operations in feedback for the network to optimizetowards those criteria, this invention enables flexibility and stabilityfor any given hardware and software combination that underlies awireless electromagnetic communications network and improves, for theentire network and at each particular node thereof, the communicationcapacity and power requirements. Furthermore, the present form of theinvention does not ignore but rather directly addresses and resolvesboth the overhead vs. content and the power vs. capacity conundrumswhich otherwise limit present-day state of the art approaches tooptimization. It does this using the experienced environment as part ofthe direct feedback, rather than requiring additional controlinformation or signaling that reduces content capacity.

When combined with the substantively null-steering approach describedhere, which helps to minimize the generated noise from all other signalssent from a node, the network power requirement for clear communicationdrops as the links effectively decouple; that is, the ‘other’ channels,since they are being null-steered, do not form part of the backgroundnoise against which the intended signal's power must be boosted to beaccurately received by the intended recipient. (See FIG. 7.)

The LEGO power optimization and null-steering then feed back(reciprocally) into the requirements for the network and network'shardware at each node, inasmuch as the minimization of unused andunintentional interaction (or interference) reduces the precision andpower necessary for frequency and other differentiation means at thenode's transceiver, and reduces the number of antennae in each array byincreasing the effective bandwidth within each multi path channel, byreducing the amount of bandwidth, frequency, time, or channel, or all ofthe above, that must be devoted to error avoidance or correction. Thatin turn simplifies the codec and other element designs for each node andlowers the cost of the transceiver front-ends.

The preferred embodiment of the invention employs a network offully-adaptive PHY-IA MIMO Network Capable Transceivers, in which eachtransceiver implementing an upper PHY that performs transmit and receiveTRANSEC, node signaling/detection protocol, transmit/receivebeamforming, and receive-side node discovery and adaptation algorithms,and a lower PHY that can meet the needs of intermittent, burst packetcommunications such as VoIP.

Communication between source and destination nodes, defined by uniquetwo-hex port addresses comprising the source and destination nodeaddresses (SNA's and DNA's) for the packet transmission, is accomplishedby routing traffic packets over at least one and possibly several routesor collections of sequential links between the source and destinationnode. Means for partitioning traffic data into individual data packetsat the source node, and collecting data packets into traffic packets atthe destination node, are accomplished in this invention using existingnetwork routing protocols. For each combination of a transmitting node,a receiving node, and a communication channel (diversity link), theunique link address and identifying transmit node address and receivenode address for the respective nodes are used as part of the messagingcontext.

Combining packet-specific, structural and origin/destination networkinformation into a unified overhead allows implementation of orthoganaltransformations of that overhead, through the use of specificpower-of-two integer number of lower PHY (LPHY) symbols (which arepreferably an OFDM waveform or PAM signal); and using a unique andidentifying link address for each node-to-node link currentlyinstantiated, which incorporates source, destination, and channel rankinformation, enables informational efficiency for short transmissionswhere otherwise structural and routing information might overweighcontent, e.g. in each packet. Working within bounds (time intervals,frequency ranges, or transmission strengths) that guard againstintrasystemic interference, the use of MIMO transformations andreciprocity-based pilot or signal weighting calculations for the correctweighting of signals transmitted and received, enables the individualpackets and messages to adapt, in a bottom-up, flexible, and responsivefashion to the real-world dynamics of a continuously varying EM flux.Using adaptively-derived diversity weighting, the method and system canrapidly take advantage of reciprocity between each node pairings'transmit and receive channels to distinguish the desired signal from thegeneral noise and potential interference. Upon RE reception at any node,downconversion and ADC operations on the diversity channels passes theincoming signal(s) through a set of inverting transformations that, forthe desired incoming signal(s), strip off known structural elements andcontinuously updates the combiner weights to reflect the dynamicallyvarying environmental and signal context, thereby continuously matchingnecessitated signal and waveform transformations to the environmentaland signal effects and sources. By successive iterations of the transmitand receive adaptation algorithm each node can have its transceiveradapt its multiport combiner and distribution weights to the eigenmodes(left and right eigenvectors) of their MIMO internode channel response,so that the resultant fully adaptive link can approach the Shannoncapacity of the MIMO communication channel, regardless of the rank ordistribution of the eigen values of that channel.

In addition, the fully adaptive system provides an automatic powercontrol mechanism (LEGO Algorithm) that can be used to maximize capacity(high throughput applications) or minimize transmit power (LPDapplications), depending on the requirements of the system at any pointduring a mission.

The resultant network is able to pass data with high spectral efficiencyrelative to non-MIMO networks, or to meet specified packet transmissionrates at much lower power levels relative to non-MIMO networks, due toits ability to pass data over multiple time-and-frequency coincidentlinks and routes, and to exploit the much over pathloss betweenintermediate nodes in the network. Moreover, the network is able toprovide this performance in the complete lack of any opportunisticmultipath (although that multipath can be exploited if it is available).

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Glossary and Definitions

-   ACK Acknowledgement-   ADC Analog-to-Digital Conversion-   ADSL Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line-   AGC Automatic Gain Control-   BS Base Station-   BER Bit Error Rate-   BW Bandwidth-   CBR Committed Bit-Rate service-   CDMA Code Division Multiple Access-   CE&FC RWA Computationally Efficient And Fast-Converging Receive    Weight Algorithm-   CMRS Cellular Mobile Radio Systems-   CODEC Encoder-decoder, particularly when used for channel coding-   CPU Central Processing Unit-   CR Channel Reciprocity-   DAC Digital-to-Analog Conversion-   DEMOD Demodulator-   DMT Digital MultiTone,-   DSL Digital Signal Loss-   DMX De-multiplexer-   DOF Degrees of Freedom-   DSP Digital Signal Processing-   EDB Error-Detection Block-   EEPROM Electronically Erasable, Programmable Read Only Memory-   FDD Frequency Division Duplex-   FDMA Frequency Division Multiple Access-   FFT Fast Fourier Transform(s)-   FPGA Freely Programmable Gate Array-   GPS Global Positioning Satellites-   GSM Global System for Mobile Communications-   LEGO Locally Enabled Global Optimization-   LMS Least Mean-Square-   LNA Low Noise Amplifier-   LS Least-Squares (An alternative form can be ‘matrix inversion’)-   MAC Media Access Control-   MGSO Modified Gram-Schmidt Orthogonalization (most popular means for    taking QRD)-   MOD Modulator-   MIMO Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output-   MMSE Minimum Mean-Square Error-   MSE Mean-Square Error-   MT Multitone-   MUX Multiplex, Multiplexer-   NACK Negative acknowledgement & request for retransmission-   NAK Negative Acknowledgement-   OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing-   PAL Programmable Array Logic-   PDA Personal Data Assistant-   PHS Personal Handiphone System-   PHY layer-   PMP Point-to-Multipoint (An alternative form can be ‘broadcast’)-   PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network-   PSK Phase-Shift Key-   π/4 QPSK (pi/4)—Quadrature Phase Shift Key-   π/4 DQPSK (pi/4)—Digital Quadrature Phase Shift Key-   PTP Point-to-Point-   QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation-   QoS Quality of Service-   QRD Matric {Q,R} decomposition (see, MGSO)-   RF Radio Frequency-   RTS Request To Send, recipient ready for traffic-   SDMA Spatial Division Multiple Access-   SINR Signal to Noise Ratio-   SOVA Soft-Optimized, Viterbi Algorithm-   SU Subscriber Unit-   TCM Trellis-Coded-Modulation-   TCP/IP Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol-   TDMA Time Division Multiple Access-   TDD Time Division Duplex-   T/R Transmit/Receive (also Tx/Rx)-   UBR Uncommitted Bit-Rate (services)-   ZE-UBR Zero-error, Uncommitted Bit-Rate (services)

Groundwork: The Network as a Dynamic Connected Set

A network is generally viewed as the combination of a set of nodes(where transmissions originate and are received) and the connectionsbetween those nodes through which the information is flowing. FIGS. 1A,1B, and 1C are graphical representation of a simple network of fivenodes (A through E) and a varying number of channels, indicated by thelines drawn between pairs of nodes. In FIGS. 1A and 1C, all five nodesare active and able to communicate with all or most of their neighbors.In FIG. 1B, node D is inactive and unable to communicate. The two-stepchannel, from C to D and from D to E, in FIG. 1A is replaced by aone-step channel from C to E in FIG. 1B, and co-exists with the two-stepchannel in FIG. 1C. A connection between any two nodes without anyintervening nodes is also known as a ‘link’.

Because each node may both transmit (send) and receive, and because theconnections amongst the set of nodes may change over time, the networkis best thought of as a dynamic structure, i.e. one that is constantlyshifting yet which still occupies the same general ‘space’ in thecommunications world. While traditional broadcast networks, or PTP orPMP networks generally tried to ‘fix’ at least the originating node, aMIMO network begins with the presumption that the communications aredynamically allocated amongst the nodes and throughout the network. Inthe present embodiment of the invention, diversity in spatial, spectral,temporal, or polarization attributes of the potential channels are notseen as variations that must be controlled or limited, but asopportunities for enhancing performance.

Limitations of Existing Art

The approaches currently described in the field, especially in Raleighand Cioffi, G. Raleigh, J. Cioffi, “Spatio-Temporal Coding for WirelessCommunications,” in Proc. 1996 Global Telecommunications Conf., November1996, pp 1809-1814), and in Foschini and Gans (G. Foschini, M. Gans, “OnLimits of Wireless Communication in a Fading Environment When UsingMultiple Antennas”, Wireless Personal Comm., March 1998, Vol. 6, Nol. 3,pp. 311-355), require additional hardware at each node comprising oneend of a channel per diversity path to exploit that diversity path. Thiscreates a geometric growth in the hardware complexity for eachparticular node, and a linear growth in cost for each diverse pathexploited by a given network, that rapidly renders any networkattempting to exploit such diversity uneconomic. Moreover, such anapproach ‘muddies its own stream’ in that it reduces the capacityincrease by the power increase needed to power the more complextransceiver. Exploitation of this multipath approach requires both highpower (t) permit data transport over the relatively weaker additionaldiversity path) and complex codecs (to permit data transports at highrates on the dominant path by filtering out the diversity pathtransmissions). To the extent that the nodes differ in their antennaemix, this approach complicates the administration and management of thenetwork by constraining the potential path exploitation topreviously-known or approved channels where the required equipment foreach diverse path is known to exist.

Spatially distributed networks overcome this particular limitation byexploiting the inherent diversity between internode channel responses inthe network. This diversity exists regardless of any multipath presenton any individual path in the network, i.e. it does not require highlevels of opportunistic multipath to be exploitable by the system.Moreover, such spatial diversity can be designed into the network bycareful choice of topologies for the nodes during the deploymentprocess, in order to provide linear growth in capacity as transceiversare added to the network. As a side benefit, the network can spatiallyexcise transmissions from compromised nodes and emitters, allowingsecure, high quality service in environments with external interference.

A downside to such an approach is its obvious weakness to unexpectedgrowth, dynamic changes in topology (from mobile, transitory, ortransient nodes), or dramatic changes in relative channel densities.Unlike the present form of the invention, such an approach does nothandle well unplanned-for competition, environmental changes, or readilyexploit opportunities arising from surprisingly (i.e. unplanned for)good network performance.

MIMO Networks: Shapes and Spaces

The complex MIMO environment and multiple dimensions of differentiation(spatial, frequency, time, code), the physical geography of any network(ring, star, mesh), the physical geographies of the surrounding terrain(creating the multipaths) and the other wireless signals from outsidethe network, and the internal network environment (of traffic patternsand node differences) create a diversity explosion.

To create and manage optimal network capacity, the preferred embodimentcreates a network topology that enforces a constraint where each nodewith M(n) antennae has ≦ M(n) other nodes in its view with whom itcommunicates at any particular interval of time. This may take the formof a ring (see FIG. 16), star (FIG. 18), mesh (FIGS. 39, 40), orcombination thereof, depending on the individual nodes' hardware andgeographic specifics. Moreover, this may dictate the placement of nodes,geographically or in uplink or downlink transmission subsets. Thisenables the creation of reciprocal subspaces for each sub-set of thenetwork and therefore for the network as an entirety. However, theapproach in the preferred embodiment can manage with other networkshapes and spaces, just as it can manage with the hardware or protocolor software constraints inherent in particular nodes.

While the preferred embodiment works with reciprocal subspaces, whereinthe network maintains reciprocity according to Eq. 1 between nodes overall links joining them, some parameters may be allowed to vary andcreate asymmetric spaces. For example, in a carrier offset case, thechannel responses are actually invariant but for the complex scalarsinusoid which creates the frequency offset; physically, this is anon-reciprocal link but logically it remains (assuming signal contentdensity on both sides is kept equal) a substantively reciprocal link.Other adaptation means are permissible as long as the network designrule of Eq. 1 is kept as a high priority.

One major difference in the present embodiment of the invention fromprior art is that by making the control and feedback aspects part of thesignal encoding process, and thereby eliminating or at least reducingthe need for a separate channel(s) fir control and feedback, the networkcontent overhead is reduced and an additional range within the signaldimension is available for signal content. The LEGO reduction to single,or small, bit sized power management signals can be similarly echoed forother network management, depending on the target objective the networkelects.

Furthermore, because the MIMO and LEGO approach described herein isusable in any network topology, and with existing protocols and schema(PSK/QAM; FDD; CDMA, including modulation-on-symbol, or synchronous,CDMA; TDMA; SDMA, etc.) the network can adapt to a diverse environmentof users rather than requiring all to have the identical hardware,software, and standards.

The diversity of transmission and reception at all nodes in the network,rather than just at a subset of hub nodes or BSs, means that every nodecan use in its local environment any redundancy in transmission orreception of data over multiple channels, whether they be spatial,polarization, spectral, temporal, or any combination thereof. Themaximum use can be made of all available (i.e. unused by others)signaling lacunae, with the nodes adaptively adjusting to the trafficand external environmental conditions according to the objectives set bythe network.

Furthermore, the present embodiment of the invention does not require apreliminary calibration of the transceiver array, the communicationschannel, or geographic site as do many approaches used in the prior art.The continuous feedback and rapid convergence of the approach allow forflexibility and adaptivity that will permit correction of miscalibrateddata, when the miscalibration represents a no-longer valid model of theenvironment for the receiving node.

Additionally, the MIMO network of the present embodiment is adaptive tochannel response changes due to network point failures. This includes:the ability to survive element failure at individual nodes (i.e. oneantenna, or transceiver, fails) without loss of communication to thatnode (though it may incur possible loss of capacity); the ability tosurvive failure of links without loss of communication to that node(e.g., by routing data through other paths); the ability to survivefailure of node (all links terminating at that node) without undulyaffecting connectivity or capacity of network; and the ability toachieve network reliability that is higher than reliability of any nodein that network. The network will automatically adjust itself to optimalperformance in event of any of these failures; potentially by reroutingactive links based on available SINR experienced at that link.

Application Areas and Advantages: MIMO

The incorporation of the control and feedback signal as part of theprocess rather than as discrete, separate, and particular parts of thesignal, can decrease the complexity of apparatus by removing the needfor a separate channel for network control. It also can decrease thecomplexity of the processing by removing the need for particulardedication of a time aspect of the reception, or by removing the needfor additional detection and interpretation of control signal from othercontent through either software or hardware. Moreover, suchincorporation also integrates the entire aspect of power management andcontrol into the signaling process rather than artificially andneedlessly separating it from the network dynamics. This integrationallows both capacity and power control to cooperatively handle packetacknowledgment, signal synchronization, and transmit/receivefunctionality at each node, and to optimize their conjoinedfunctionality to the needs of the environment, the user, or the noderather than being constrained to disparate, pre-set and non-dynamicdictates by network administration that are only responsive to the realworld environment to the extent that the system designers' assumptionsaccurately modeled the real-world and unknowable complexities.

Because the control and feedback signaling is incorporated into theprocess, the present form of the invention does not impose overheadconstraints or capacity demands upon the network to nearly the samedegree as the prior art does. For a given infrastructure andenvironment, therefore, the present form of the invention providesincreased capacity and performance through dynamic, and self-moderatingsignal processing algorithms, with a minimal overhead.

Additionally, because the method does not require a strict hierarchicaldivision between Base Station and Subscriber Unit nodes, but ratheradapts to the diversity of reception and transmission at each particularnode depending on its then-current environmental context, the methodallows for rapid and responsive deployment of mixed hardware units beingconditioned by factors external to the network, such as user choice oreconomic limitations.

Unlike prior art, the present form of the invention will work with eachof CDMA, FDD, TDMA, SDMA, and PSK/QAM implementations, and with anycombination thereof. Because the present form of the invention will workwith diverse environments, where the diversity may come from within thenetwork (rather than from sources external to it), this protects usersand companies' investments in prior infrastructure and avoids creatingeither a ‘captive service market’ subject to crippling and suddeninnovation, or creating a network which will suffer when aChristiansen-style disruptive technology advance arrives. Moreover,diversity reception, which is the redundant transmission and receptionof data over multiple channels (whether the diversity comes in spatial,polarization, spectral, or temporal form, or any combination thereof),permits successful operation in environmental conditions which wouldotherwise block any particular channel or perfect subset of channels.This means that the present form of the invention will continue tooperate in dirty, bursts, or difficult conditions, whether the impact ofthe negative force is on the nodes or the external environment.

As such, there are a number of potential implementations whichimmediately become feasible for a dynamically adaptive network, in themilitary and security fields. These include military and civilianapplications where individual unit or node failure can be anticipatedand therefore must not bring down the network, and where environmentalconditions can become disruptive for particular nodes or links. Thesewould also include support and exploration applications where theexternal environment (including node location) and network internalenvironment (traffic, connectivity) may change over time, as thecomponent nodes move and change capabilities and capacities.

Among the effects which enhance the ready establishment and dynamic useof security advantages through the present form of the invention are thethree-layer pilot signal (network mask plus originator mask plusrecipient mask) detailed below (See FIG. 21). This allows users tocommunicate both on an unsecured overall network and a separately securesub-network, on discrete (possibly encrypted) subnets through a subnetmask. This also allows network establishment and alteration of anysubnet through designation and adaptation of shared subnet masks,wherein layers of encryption become algorithmically establishable. Thepresent form of the invention also allows the fast detection,acquisition, interference excision, and reception of originatorsattempting to talk with the recipient, prioritizing the same accordingto their match to any set of subnet masks (highly secured signalspresumably taking priority over less secured or open signals).Alternative uses of origination masks or recipient masks allowdual-natured communication priorities and the ability to suppressunintended recipients via the imposition of either origination orrecipient masks, the secure transmission through interim nodes notprovided with either mask, and the ability to determine and remove groupdelay as a fundamental part of the FLS algorithm.

Unlike the prior art, the present form of the invention will also allowfor optional specialization (e.g. in transmission, reception,flow-through channelization) at any particular node in a dynamicfashion, thereby allowing the network as a whole to adapt to transientenvironmental fluctuations without concomitant alteration inon-the-ground hardware or in-the-system software alterations. Such readyadaptivity increases the total cost-effectiveness, as well as thedynamic stability for the entire network.

Unlike prior art, the present form of the invention supports diversityreception and transmission at all nodes in the network. This creates alevel of flexibility, adaptivity to environmental or network changes,and dynamic stability which increases the ready scalability overmultiple distinct approaches simultaneously or serially accepted by thenetwork. Since the core reciprocity and protocols can be used bydistinctly different hardware and signals, the present form of theinvention permits local accretive growth rather than demanding top-down,network-wide initial standardization, thereby decreasing the capital andplanning cost for implementing or changing a network.

Another advantage of the present form of the invention is that itpermits shared antenna usage amongst multiple nodes, thereby decreasingthe number of antenna necessary for any given node to attain aparticular capacity, and thereby decreasing for the network as a wholethe cost and complexity required for that same level of capacity.Furthermore, it also permits any set of nodes to use a diversity ofchannels without requiring an increase in the antenna or internalcomplexity (in both hardware and software) at every node in said set ofnodes.

A further advantage of the present form of the invention is the abilityto adaptively select and use ad-hoc, single-frequency networks on all orpart of the network, under conditions when network traffic is ‘bursty’,that is, when there are significant disparities between the high and lowcontent volumes of traffic being communicated amongst that part of thenetwork.

A particularly significant advantage of the present form of theinvention is that using the reciprocity equation equalizes theprocessing or duty cycle for message transmission and reception acrossboth directions of a link, thereby lowering the processing imbalancewhich otherwise might be created between transmission and receptionmodes. This in turn reduces the average complexity which must be builtinto each particular node by decreasing the maximal capacity it must becreated to handle for an overall network minimal capacity average.

Another advantage of the present form of the invention is that, unlikemuch of the prior art, the present form of the invention will work inuncalibrated areas where the environmental context is either previouslyunknown or altered from previous conditions. This allows for rapid,uniphase adoption and expansion in any given area without requiringprior to the adoption the precise calculation of all environmentaleffects upon transmissions and receptions within said area at allplanned or possible node locations. This further allows the adoption anduse for transient, or mobile, nodes in areas without requiring allpossible combinations of channel responses amongst said nodes firstbeing calibrated and then said channel responses matched to currentconditions, or constrained to pre-set limitations.

Another advantage of the present form of the invention is that itprovides rapid correction for miscalibrated data, thereby reducing thecost of inaccurate measurement, human or other measurement error, orincorrect calibration calculations. This in turn reduces the overheadand planning required for adaptation for any given network to aparticular environment, either initially or as the environment changesover time, as the channel responses in the real world can be readilyadapted to.

A concomitant advantage of the present form of the invention is therapid and dynamic adaptation to channel response changes when a networkfailure, at any particular node or sub-set of nodes, occurs. Thisgreatly increases the stability and durability of any networkincorporating the present form of the invention without the level ofcost, complexity, or duplication required by the present state of theart. Amongst the advantages conveyed are the ability for the network tosurvive partial failure at any particular node without being forced todrop or lose that node (i.e. maintaining maximal attainable capacitybetween that node and all others to which is can communicate), theability to survive the total lose of any particular node, by sharing thesignal traffic amongst alternative channels. The present form of theinvention also permits the rerouting of active links around ‘lost’ or‘damaged’ nodes without human intervention by adherence to the newreciprocity measurements. And the increase in network stability toexceed not just the reliability of each particular node, but the averagereliability of all nodes for, while any subset of nodes still remainsoperable, the maximal network capacity for that set can be maintained.This is unlike the present state of the art, where if 50% of the nodesof a network fail then the average network communication drops to zero,as all the channels lose one half of their pairs. Furthermore, thepresent form of the invention enables the network to automaticallyadjust itself and its optimal performance in the event of any partialfailure without requiring human intervention, thereby decreasing thecost and increasing the responsiveness of the network. Even moreimportant is the fact that, upon incremental re-instatement orrestoration of particular node or channel function, network optimizationcontinually advances without manual re-establishment.

Another advantage of the present form of the invention is that itminimizes the complexity, and increases the accuracy, of the signalweight update operation at each particular node and for the network as awhole.

Another advantage of the present form of the invention is that itprovides a computationally efficient mechanization of cross-correlationoperations for both nodes and channels across and within the network. Asthe number of signals simultaneously processed on a singletime-frequency channel grows, the marginal complexity increase caused byaddition of those signals drops, for fast adaptation methods such asautocorrelation approaches, e.g. inverse-based or least-squares). Thisis because the Digital Signal Processing (DSP) cycles needed forhigh-complexity operations in fast techniques, such as matrixcomputations, QR decompositions, or data whitening operations common toDSP processing, can be amortized over the larger number of signals. Thehigher overhead of hardware and software complexity needed to handlesignal complexity thereby is lowered on a per-signal basis the greaterthe complexity actually used by the system. For certain techniques suchas pilot-based or least-squares signal weighting, the fast techniquesbecome less complex than the current conventional approaches such asLeast-Mean-Squares or stochastic gradient, wherein the overhead remainsindifferent to the increasing complexity of the signals being processed.When the number of signals that must be processed is equal to one-halfthe number of combiner weights used at an adaptive receiver, forexample, then the crossover in overhead complexity vs. speed occursbetween least squares and least mean squares.

Because the present form of the invention is dynamically adaptive, itcan use any subordinate portion (in time, channels, or network subset)of the process wherein a ‘reciprocal subspace’ exists to implement itsfull value. Even though the parameters of the signal processing may varybetween the uplink (transmission) and downlink (reception) phasesbetween any two nodes on any given channel or link, to the extent thatthey overlap such a reciprocal subspace can be effectuated and used. Forexample, a reciprocal subspace can be created where there is a carrieroffset, where the channel responses are distinguished solely by a scalarcomplex sinusoid (e.g. a frequency offset), between the two nodes,regardless of which is, at any particular moment, transmitting orreceiving.

Since the present form of the invention with its non-orthogonalmultitone capability allows the addition of mobile, transient, ortemporary nodes to any network, it creates a system that can manage andprovision any combination of fixed, portable, low mobility, and highmobility nodes and links. The capacity constraints being node andchannel specific rather than network delimited also permits theheterogeneous combination of differing capacities, thereby allowingperipheral distinctiveness, creating the potential for a system with ahierarchy of nodes including high-function, base-function, andlimited-function or even single-function (e.g. appliance) nodes.

The present form of the invention permits the ability to achieve nearlylinear increases in capability, even superlinear increases (in dirtyenvironments) for increases in infrastructure, namely the RE transceivercapacities within the network. This is a significant advance over theprior state of the art for PTP networks which achieve sublinear capacitygrowth with network infrastructure growth.

In non-fully loaded networks using the present form of the invention,the MIMO connectivity can provide sharply higher data rates toindividual channels or nodes where the additional information flow, tothe maximal capacity of the particular nodes, is routed through nodeswhich have intended reception or transmission capacity available. Thisis a ‘water balancing’ approach to traffic maximization available onlywhen multiple rather than single path capabilities are establishedthrough a network, or any network structure that instantiates fixedbottlenecks (e.g. ‘star’ or ‘hub’ topologies, BS PMP networks, orfixed-channel PTP networks).

Additionally, the reciprocity approach enables an automatic and dynamicload sharing amongst the channels and nodes which minimizes bottlenecksor, in the military or security environment, desirable targets ofopportunity for ‘hot centers’ of traffic. Commercially this is morevaluable by reducing the power and complexity requirements of what inPTP and PMP networks are BSs to attain a given network capacity andpower efficiency.

The preferred embodiment of the present form of the invention includes anumber of interacting and synergistic elements, both in hardware and inoperational software. The preferred embodiment, as a network, willincorporate particular functional elements at individual nodes, as wellas overall systemic features which may not be shared by or incorporatedin the hardware of each particular node (i.e. there may existspecialization amongst the nodes). As stated in the summary, each nodepreferentially has an antennae array; multiple, multitone, transceivers(one per antenna); and constrains itself to reciprocal uplinks anddownlinks (FIGS. 13 A and 13B). The antennae array is spatially and/orpolarization diverse and transmits and receives signal energy duringalternating time slots (or sequences of time slots in TDD-TDMA systems).Each transceiver is a vector OFDM transceiver, with digital signalprocessing elements, that downconverts, A/D converts, and frequencychannelizes data induced on each antenna (or other diversity channel)during receive time slots, and inverse channelizes, D/A converts, andupconverts data intended for each antenna (or diversity channel) duringtransmit time slots; linearly combines data received over each diversitychannel, on each frequency channel and receive time slot; redundantlydistributes data intended for each diversity channel, on each frequencychannel and transmit time slots; and computes combiner and distributorweights that exploit the, narrowband, MIMO channels response on eachfrequency channel and time slot (FIG. 15) Although the preferredembodiment of the invention allows individual nodes to vary greatly intheir capacities, a set of nodes preferentially will incorporate thehardware capabilities detailed in the following paragraphs.

The first preference is that the transmission element be a multi-tonefront end, using OFDM with cyclic prefixes at fixed terminals(generally, BS) (FIG. 22, Items 314, 318, 322,) and generalizedmultitone with guard-time gaps (FIG. 22, Item 310) at mobile terminals(generally, SU). To minimize aperture blur, the system uses tonegrouping into narrowband frequency channels (FIG. 22, Item 348). TheOFDM can be readily implemented in hardware using Fixed-FourierTransform enabling chips; it also simplified the equalization procedure,eliminated decision feedback, and provides a synergistic blend withadaptive arrays. An alternative uses frequency-channelized PSK/QAM withmodulation-on-symbol CDMA (that is, synchronous CDMA).

Each node of the network incorporates a MIMO transceiver. FIG. 24displays a functional representation of such, and the hardware andprocessing is detailed over the next several paragraphs.

Each MIMO transceiver possesses an antennae array where the antennae arespatially separated and the antennae array itself is preferentiallycircularly symmetric (FIG. 15, Item 110). This provides 1-to-M modes (RFfeeds) for the signals to be transmitted or received over, maximizes theseparability of transmission links, enables a scalable DSP backend, andrenders the MIMO transceiver fault-tolerant to LNA failures.

In an alternative embodiment the transceiver sends the transmissionsignal through Butler Mode Forming circuitry (FIG. 25, Item 380), whichincludes in a further embodiment a Band Pass Filter (FIG. 25. Item 382)where the transmission is reciprocally formed with the shared Receiverfeeds, and the number of modes out equals the numbers of antennae,established as an ordered set with decreasing energy. The Butler ModeForming circuitry also provides the spatial signal separationadaptation, preferentially with a FFT-LS algorithm that integrates thelink separation operation with the pilot/data sorting, link detection,multilink combination, and equalizer weight calculation operations. ThisButler Mode Forming approach means that the transmission forming isreadily reciprocal with the receiver feeds (also shared), makes thetransmission fault tolerant for PA (Phase-Amplitude) failures, andenables a readily scalable DSP front end; it also enables thetransceiver to ratchet the number of antennae used for a particulartransmission or reception up or down.

Having passed through the Butler Mode Forming circuitry, thetransmission is then sent through the transmission switch (FIG. 15, Item112), with the uplink frequencies being processed by the LNA bank (FIG.15, Item 113), moderated by an AGC (FIG. 15, Item 114), and the downlinkfrequencies being processed by a PA bank (FIG. 15, Item 124). The LNAbank also instantiates the low noise characteristics for the outgoingsignal and communicates the characteristics to the PA bank to properlymanage the power amplification of the incoming signals to moderate thetransmission overlap.

Further transmission switch processing then hands off the transmissionto the frequency translator (FIG. 15, Item 115), which is itselfgoverned in part by the Los circuit (FIG. 15, Item 116). Thetransmission switch throughout is controlled by a controller (FIG. 15,Item 120) such that basebank link distribution of the outgoing signalstakes place such that energy is distributed over the multiple RF feedson each channel, steering up to K_(feed) beams and nulls independentlyon each FDMA channel in order to enhance node and network capacity andcoverage. This control further greatly reduces the link fade margin andthat node's PA requirements.

From the transmission switch the transmission goes to an ADC bank (FIG.15, Item 117), while a received signal will come from a DAC bank (FIG.15, Item 123), the complexity of the analog/digital/analog conversiondetermining the circuit mix within the banks.

Then from the ADC bank the transmission flows through a MultitoneDemodulator Bank (FIG. 15, Item 118), which splits it into 1 through KFDMA channels, where K is the number of feeds. The now separated tones(1 through M for each channel) in aggregate forms the entire basebandfor the transmission, which combines spatial, polarization, either, orboth, feeds across the FDMA channels or even combines up to K FDMAchannels as transmission data density requires. This combination enablessteering a greater number of beams and nulls than the RF feeds, up tothe number of feeds times the number of FDMA channels. It also separatesup to K_(feed) links per FDMA channel, improves overall transmissionlink error and/or retransmission rates, improves overall networkcapacity and coverage, and reduces the link fade margins, reduces the PAcost, and reduces battery consumption at the other ends of the link.

From the Multitone Demodulator Bank the Rx data is passed to circuitryfor mapping the received broadband multitone signal into separated,narrowband frequency channels and time slots (FIG. 15, Item 119).

An outgoing transmission signal experiences the reverse of the aboveprocess; having been mapped to tones and RE feeds (FIG. 15, Item 121),it passes into a Multitone Modulator bank (FIG. 15, Item 122), an DACbank (FIG. 15 item 123), the transceiver switch, the FrequencyTranslator, the transceiver switch, the PA bank element (FIG. 15, Item124), the transceiver switch, and thence in the preferred embodimentthrough the Butler Mode Form and on to the RF T/R feeds (FIG. 24, Item130) and to the antennae array and the particular transmission antennaetherein (FIG. 15, Item 125)

The transmission switch throughout is controlled such that baseband linkdistribution of the outgoing signals takes place such that energy isdistributed over the multiple RE feeds on each channel, steering up toK_(feed) beams and nulls independently on each FDMA channel in order toenhance node and network capacity and coverage. This control furthergreatly reduces the link fade margin and that node's PA requirements.

The particular Multitone MOD and DEMOD elements (FIG. 15, Item 118 and119) in a node vary according to whether it will be handling Fixed,Portable, Low-Mobility, and/or High-Mobility Nodes. Generally, a signalpassing into the MT DEMOD may be passed through a comb filter, where a128-bit sample is run through a 2:1 comb; then passed through an FFTelement, preferably with a 1,024 real-IF function; and then mapped tothe data using 426 active receive ‘bins’. Each bin covers a bandwidth of5.75 MHz with an inner 4.26 MHz passband, so each of the 426 bins has 10MHz. The middle frequency, bin 256, will be at 2.56 MHz, leaving abuffer of 745 kHz on either side of the content envelope. Within thetransmission, when it passes through the MT MOD, presuming each link is100 μs, 12.5 μs at each end of the transmission is added as acyclicprefix buffer and cyclic suffix buffer, to allow for timing error. (FIG.22, Items 314, 3181, 322.) In an alternative embodiment, presuming thatonly a cyclic prefix is needed, the system can either double the size ofthe prefix (FIG. 22, Item 310) or add the suffix to the signal time. Thereverse processing as appropriate (i.e. stripping off the cyclic prefixand suffix buffers) is not shown but is well known to the art.

The 426 bins form 13 channels and 426 tones, (FIG. 26, Item 430), witheach Channel forming 320 kHz and 32 tons (FIG. 26, Item 432), beingfurther organized with an upper and lower guard tone (FIG. 26, Items 438and 436, respectively) and 30 information bearing tones (FIG. 26, Item440). An alternative embodiment for a high-mobility environment halvesthe numbers of tones and doubles the MHz, so there are only 213 bins(and tones) for 4.26 MHz (FIG. 27, Item 442), and each channel onlycarries 16 tones (FIG. 27, item 446), with 1 being an guard tone (FIG.27, Item 448) and fifteen being information-carrying tones (FIG. 27,Item 450).

For non-fixed embodiments, the timing modifications may be varied. Thesignal being processed is handed first to a MLA where anelement-multiply with a Tx or Rx (for transmit or receive, respectively)window is performed. The guard time is retained to serve as dead timebetween signals, effectively punctuating them. The high-mobilityembodiment halves the number of bins, doubling the average bin size, anduses duplication to increase QoS within the multitone. (FIG. 26.)

The next stage through the MIMO transceiver is the incorporation (on thetransmission side) or interpretation (on the reception side) of theQAM/PSK symbols, prior to the signal's passing through the MIMOtransceiver exits (if being transmitted) or enters (if being received)through a Link codec. Each FDMA channel will separate through the codecinto 1 through M links, and each Link codec will incorporate toneequalization ITI remove as necessary. The Link codec also includes SOVAbit recovery, error coding and error detection, and package fragmentretransmission methodologies.

An optional alternative embodiment would at this point further includetone/slot interleaving (for the reception) or deleaving (for thetransmission). A further optional alternative embodiment would replacethe TCM codec and SOYA decoder with a Turbo codec.

Another optional alternative will incorporate dual-polarization. (SeeFIG. 25.) Fundamentally, this halves the modes and complexity of thetransmissions and receptions, while doubling the capacity for anyparticular link/PA power constraint. In this alternative embodiment, theantennae array provides 1-to-(M/2) modes (RF feeds) for downconversionand demodularization. The Butler Mode Forming splits the modes intopositive and negative polarities, where the negative polarization hasthe opposite, and normally orthogonal, polarization to the positivepath. Preferentially the Butler Mode Forming works with circularpolarizations. This alternative embodiment enables scalable DSPtransmission and reception paths and renders the entirety fault tolerantto LNA/PA failures. At the last stage (for transmission; the firststage, for reception) the signal passes through a dual-polarized Linkcodec, That links the nodes over the dual polarizations, doubles thecapacity under any particular link/PA power constraint, greatly reducesthe codec complexity (and thus cost), and the link/PA power requirementfor any particular link rate constant.

The Transceiver DSP backend for the preferred embodiment is detailed inFIG. 15. The Butler Mode Forming element with its RF transmission andreception leads, is controlled by the T/R switch control, which in turnis subject to the system clock and synchronization subsystem. Antransmission signal (which can be continuous, periodic, triggered,human-determined, reactive, context-sensitive, data quality or quantitysensitive) that forms a Tx link message passes through a symbol encoderbank and into the circuitry where Delay/ITI/pilot gating are imposed,said circuitry being linked to its reciprocal for received signals. Thetransmission data symbols, over k channels, now pass through themultilink diversity distribution circuitry, where for each channel ktransmission gains G(k) are adapted to the proper weighting, asdetermined by the multilink, LEGO gain adaptation element (with bothalgorithms and circuitry). From the multilink diversity distribution thetransmission next is mapped over diversity modes and FFT bins, thenhanded to the transmission/reception compensation bank. Here, accordingto the perceived environment of transmissions and reception and theparticular Transmission/Reception compensation algorithm used, thetransmission is passed to the inverse frequency channel bank and,finally, into the Butler Mode Forming element. This Transceiver DSPbackend also passes the information about the transmission signal fromthe compensation bank element to the synchronization subsystem.

The LEGO gain adaptation element at each node enables the network tooptimally balance the power use against capacity for each channel, link,and node, and hence for the network as a whole. FIG. 32 discloses thefundamental form of the algorithm used.

A capacity objective β for a particular node 2 receiving from anothernode 1 is set as the target to be achieved by node 2. Node 2 solves theconstrained local optimization problem:

$\begin{matrix}{{\min\limits_{\pi_{1}{(q)}}{\sum\limits_{q}{\pi_{1}(q)}}} = {1^{T}\pi_{1}\mspace{14mu}{such}\mspace{14mu}{that}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 3} \\{{{\sum_{q \in {Q{(m)}}}{\log\left( {1 + {\gamma(q)}} \right)}} \geq {\beta(m)}},} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 4}\end{matrix}$

where π₁(q) is the SU (user 1 node) transmit power for link number q,

γ(q) is the signal to interference noise ratio (SINR) seen at the outputof the beamformer,

1 is a vector of all 1s,

and

π₁ is a vector whose q^(th) element is p₁ (q).

The aggregate set Q(m) contains a set of links that are grouped togetherfor the purpose of measuring capacity flows through those links.

An example of this would be if SU had connections to multiple BSs, andwe were primarily concerned with the total information flow into and outof a given node. In this case all of the links that connected to thatnode would be in the same aggregate set. Also in this description, wehave adopted the convention that each transmit path from a transmitterto a receiver for a given narrow-band frequency channel is given aseparate link number, even if the BS and SU are the same. Thus multipletransmit modes, that say exploit multipath or polarization diversity,are each given different link numbers, even though the source anddestination nodes might be identical. Moreover, if a BS/SU pair transmitover multiple frequency channels, then each channel is given a separatelink number. (This simplifies notation considerably.)

An example of this is shown in FIG. 19. The BSs are represented bycircles and the SUs by triangles. Each arrow represents a communicationlink. The BSs and SUs can

be dynamically combined into proper subsets of transmit uplink andreceive uplink. The choice of aggregate sets can be arbitrary, providedno link is in multiple aggregate sets. However in a preferredembodiment, the aggregate sets are links that share a common node andhence common, readily available channel parameters.

The downlink objective function can be written as:min Σ_(q)π₂(q)=1^(T)π₂ such that  EQ. 5Σ_(q∈Q(m))log(1+γ(q))≧β(m)  EQ. 6The required feasibility condition, that Σ_(q) _(∈) _(Q(m)) π₁(q)≦R₁(m)is reported to the network, and in the preferred embodiment, reported toa network controller, so that β(m) can be modified as needed to staywithin the constraints.

In an alternative embodiment, the capacity constraints β(m) aredetermined in advance for each aggregate set, based on known QoSrequirements for given nodes or group of nodes. The objective functionthen seeks to minimize the total power in the network as suggested byEQ. 4.

By defining the noise normalized power transfer matrix by:P _(rt)(q,j)=|w ^(H) _(r)(q)H _(rt)(q,j)g _(t)(j)|²,  EQ. 7

-   where w_(r)(q) is a receiver weight vector for link q, and,-   g_(t)(j) is the transmit weight vector for link j.    By unit normalizing the receive and transmit weights with respect to    the background interference autocorrelation matrix, the local model    can state:    w _(r) ^(H)(q)R _(i) _(r) _(,i) _(r) (q)w _(r)(q)=1, and g _(t)    ^(T)(q)R _(i) _(t) _(,i) _(t) (q)g _(t)*(q)=1   EQ. 52    enabling the nodal model to express the SINR equation as:

$\begin{matrix}{{\gamma(q)} = \frac{{P_{rt}\left( {q,q} \right)}{\pi_{1}(q)}}{1 + {\sum\limits_{j \neq q}{{P_{rt}\left( {q,j} \right)}{\pi_{l}(j)}}}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 8}\end{matrix}$

Accordingly, a matrix condition can be defined on the range of possibleoutput SINRs; and from this, π_(t) has a feasible, that is non-negativesolution, if and only if:ρ(δ(γ)(P _(rt)−δ(P _(rt)))<1,  EQ. 9where ρ(M) is the spectral radius of a matrix M,

-   the non-negative power transfer matrix P_(rt) has qj'th element    given in EQ. 7,-   δ(γ) is a diagonal matrix whose q'th element is γ(q)

and

-   δ(P_(rt)) is a diagonal matrix with the same diagonal as P_(rt).    The weight normalization in EQ. 52, and the assumption of reciprocal    channel matrices leads to the reciprocity equation (EQ. 1), and the    fact that the uplink and downlink objective functions in EQ. 3 and    EQ. 4 are identical for the same target SINRs.

Various means for solving the optimization in EQ. 3 exist; the preferredembodiment uses a very simple approximation for γ(q), as very weakconstraints to the transmit powers are all that are needed to yieldobjective functions which satisfy the reciprocity equation (EQ. 2).

Another approach can take advantage of the case where all the aggregatesets contains a single link, and we have non-negligible environmentalnoise or interference. For smaller networks, all the channel transfergains in the matrices P₁₂ and P₂₁ are estimated and the transmit powersare computed as Perron vectors from:

$\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{D_{21} = {\log\left( {1 + \frac{1}{{p\left( p_{21} \right)} - 1}} \right)}} \\{= {\log\left( {1 + \frac{1}{{p\left( p_{12}^{T} \right)} - 1}} \right)}} \\{= D_{12}}\end{matrix} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 10}\end{matrix}$

In this case a simple power constraint is imposed upon the transmitpowers, so that they remain feasible. The optimization is alternatingdirections, first the weights are optimized, then the powers areobtained from the Perron vectors, and the process is repeated.

Another embodiment assumes effectively that the denominator in Eq. 8remains approximately constant even after changes to the power levels inother nodes in the network (hence the local optimization approach),because the beamformer weights in the network (transmit and receive) inthe MIMO approach will attempt to cancel the co-channel interference inthe network, making it insensitive to power level changes of theinterferers. The denominator in Eq. 8 represents the post beamforminginterference seen by the receiver associated with link q for the forwardlink (downlink) if r=1, and the reverse link if r=2.

With this approximation, and a rewriting of Eq. 8 (for the uplink) to:

$\begin{matrix}{{\gamma(q)} \approx {\frac{{P_{21}\left( {q,q} \right)}{\pi_{1}(q)}}{i_{2}(q)}\mspace{14mu}{where}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 11} \\{{i_{2}(q)} = {1 + {\sum_{j \neq q}{{P_{21}\left( {q,j} \right)}{\pi_{1}(j)}}}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 12}\end{matrix}$is the post beamforming interference energy, and is assumed constant forthe adjustment interval for current transmit power values, the node cansolve EQ. 3 in closed form using classic water filling arguments basedon Lagrange multipliers. A similar equation is established for thedownlink.

An alternative embodiment of Eq. 11 is to measure, provide, and useactual information for additional, available, or important terms in thedenominator of Eq. 8 and to incorporate them into Eq. 12, and thenrather than closed form use successive applications thereof to themodified problem using local data.

Another alternative embodiment is to solve, at each node, theconstrained optimization problem:

$\begin{matrix}{{\max\limits_{m}{\sum\limits_{q \in {Q{(m)}}}{\log\left( {1 + {\gamma(q)}} \right)}}},{{such}\mspace{14mu}{that}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 13} \\{{{\sum\limits_{q \in {Q{(m)}}}{\pi_{1}(q)}} \leq {R_{1}(m)}},{{\gamma(q)} \geq 0}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{11mu} 14}\end{matrix}$using the approximation in Eq. 11, which is a water-filling solutionsimilar to that described above for Eq. 3. This solution requires ahigh-level network optimizer to control the power constraints, R₁(q), todrive the network to a max-min solution.

The preferred embodiment, however, solves the local problem byattempting to minimize the total power as a function of the targetoutput SINR. The output SINR will be the ratio of square of the channeltransfer gain times the transmit power, divided by the interferencepower seen at the output of the beamformer, where:γ(q)=|h(q)|²π₁(q)/i ₂(q)  EQ. 15γ(q)=|h(q)|²π₂(q)/i ₁(q)  EQ. 16

where |h(q)|² is the square of the channel transfer gain,

π₁(q) is the transmit power for link q during the reverse link or uplinktransmission,

π₂(q) is the transmit power for link q during forward link or downlinktransmission,

i₁(q) is the interference power seen at the output of the beamformerused by the SU associated with link q,

-   -   and,

i₂(q) is the interference power seen at the output of the beamformerused by the BD associated with link q.

This makes the output SINR a function of all the transmit powers at allthe other SUs in the network. Additionally, by normalizing thebeamforming weights with respect to the background interference, it ispossible to maintain the reciprocity equation even in the presence ofarbitrary interference and noise, due to non-cooperative signal sources,such as jammers or co-channel communication devices. Maximizing the SINRyields optimal receiver weights that can remove the effect of jammersand co-channel interferers. The reciprocity equation insures that theoptimal transmit weights puts substantive nulls in the direction ofthese same co-channel interferers. For military applications, thisimplies that the network reduces it's probability of detection andinterception, and for co-channel communication systems, it reduces it'stransmitted interference, and is effectively a ‘good neighbor’permitting system deployment in otherwise unacceptable environments.Commercially, this allows a network employing the present embodiment ofthis invention to cope with competitive, impinging, wireless networknodes and transmissions.

It can be shown that there is a 1-1 mapping between all the transmitpowers and all of the output SINRs, i.e. there exists a vector valuedfunction F₁ such that F₁(γ)=π₁.

The function has an inverse so that F₁ ⁻¹(π₁)=γ. A key result that isexploited by this embodiment is the fact that if the channels arereciprocal, then the objective functions, and the constraint set imposedby (1) is identical as a function of γ for both the uplink and downlinkobjective functions. Mathematically this means these objective functionscan be stated in general terms as:f(γ)=1^(T) F ₁(γ)=1^(T) F ₂(γ),  EQ. 17where π₂=F₂ (γ) is the mapping between the SINRs and the BS transmitpowers.

In the preferred embodiment, each node uses the above as it defines andgenerates its local model as follows:

Given an initial γ₀ generate the model,L(γ,g,β)=g ^(T)γ  EQ. 20Σ_(q∈Q(m))log(1+γ(q))≧β(m)  EQ. 21g=∇ _(γ) f(γ₀)  EQ. 22

where L (γ,g,β) is a linearized model of the objective function,

g^(T)γ is an inner product between the gradient of the objectivefunction and a set of target SINRs,

Σ_(q∈Q(m))log(1+γ(q))≧β(m) is the capacity constraint for aggregate setm,

-   -   and,

g=∇_(γ)f(γ₀) is the gradient of the objective function (the totaltransmit power) as a function of the target SINRs.

The new γ_(α) is updated fromγ_(*)=arg min_(γ) L(γ,g,β)  EQ. 23γ_(α)=γ₀+α(γ_(*)−γ₀)  EQ. 24

The constant α is chosen between 0 and 1 and dampens the update step ofthe algorithm. This determines a target SINR that the algorithm adaptsto. The update for the transmit power for link q becomes,π₂(q)=γ_(α) i ₁(q)/|h(q)|²  EQ. 25π₁(q)=γ_(α) i ₂(q)//|h(q)|²  EQ. 26

Where i₁(q) and i₂(q) are the post beamforming interference power seenat the SU and the BS respectively for link q.

The present embodiment of this invention uses advantageously the factthat the q^(th) element of the gradient of the objective function can bewritten as the product of the interference powers divided by the squareof the transfer gain:{∇_(γ) f(γ₀)}_(q) =i ₁(q)i ₂(q)//|h(q)|².  EQ. 27

The transmit power update relationship in Eq. 25 and Eq. 26 can beapplied repeatedly for a fixed feasible γ_(α) and the convergence ofπ₁→F₁(γ_(α)) is guaranteed. In fact some assert this convergence will beguaranteed if we optimize the receive weights at each iteration. (SeeVisotsky, E; Madhow, U, “Optimum Beamforming Using Transmit AntennaArrays”, Vehicular Technology Conference, 1999 IEEE 4, Volume 1, pp851-856, though he only considered the effects in a Rank 1 channel, thatis a single narrowband rather than a MIMO channel.) A similar statementholds for π₂→F₂(γ_(α)). In an alternative embodiment where the properrelationship is unknown, or dynamically changing, then a suitably longblock of N samples is used to establish the relationship, where N iseither 4 times the number of antennae or 128, whichever is larger, withthe result being used to update the receive weights at each end of thelink, optimize the local model in Eq. 23 and Eq. 24, and then apply Eq.25 and Eq. 26.

The algorithm used in the preferred embodiment enables the network, andlocal nodes thereof, to attain several important results. First, foreach aggregate set m, the optimization of the local model(s) at eachnode(s) completely decouples the network optimization problem to anindependent (set) of local problem(s) that is solved among the aggregateset links. Accordingly, within a given aggregate set we inherit thenetwork objective function model:L _(m)(γ,g,β)≡Σ_(q∈Q(m)) g _(q)γ(q)  EQ. 28Σ_(q∈Q(m))log(1+γ(q))≧β(m)  EQ. 29g _(q) =i ₁(q)i ₂(q)//|h(q)|²  EQ. 30

where L_(m) (γ,g,β) is the sum of the separable, linearized, objectivefunctions corresponding to the aggregate set number m, where eachlocalized objective function depends only on variables that pertain tothe given aggregate set,

g_(q) γ(q) is the product of the q'th element of the gradient vectorwith the SINR for link q,

g_(q) is the q'th element of the gradient vector,

and,

|h(q)|² is the square of the channel transfer gain from the transmitbeamformer, through the channel to the output beamformer (not includingthe transmit power).

Second, this approach eliminates matrix channel estimation as anecessary step, as solving the local problem only requires that anestimate of the post beamforming interference power, a single realnumber for each link, be transmitted to the other end of the link, or inanother embodiment to the node assigned to computing the transmit powersfor a given aggregate set. For each link, a single real number, thetransmit power, is then propagated back to the transmitter. This is trueeven for networks with large rank MIMO channel matrices.

Third, the optimization problem, which is stated in general terms in Eq.17, when you plug in a formula for π it as a function of γ into theobjective function, i.e. 1^(T)F_(r)(γ) for the SINR to power mappingF_(r)(γ), is reduced from a complex and potentially unsolvable problemto one that has a simple closed form solution, and thus can use a wellknown water filling problem seen in classical information theory (see T.Cover, T. Joy, Elements of Information Theory, Wiley; 1991); MatthewBromberg and Brian Agee, “The LEGO approach for achieving max-mincapacity in reciprocal multipoint networks,” in Proceedings of theThirty Fourth Asilomar Cont. Signals, Systems, and Computers, October2000.

Fourth, even when starting from non-feasible starting points, thealgorithm rapidly converges; in the preferred embodiment, where allparameters are updated after every receive block, it converges to afixed point within the vicinity of the optimal solution; and in analternative embodiment, where the γ_(α) vector is held fixed untilπ₁→F₁(γ_(α)) and π₂→F₂(γ_(α)) before updating the weights and updatingγ_(α) again.

A figure illustrating the computational tasks at the BS and the SU for agiven link q is shown in FIG. 34. It is assumed that the BS is assignedthe task of computing the transmit gains for this particular example.The figure shows that only two numbers are transferred from the BS tothe SU and from the SU to the BS. The basic computational tasks at eachnode are also shown.

In the preferred embodiment, only one side of the link need perform thepower management computations. One of the principle advantages andstrengths of the present embodiment of the invention is that it replaceshalf of the prior art's explicit, dual computations with an implicitcomputation that is performed by the physical transmission of data,which generates the real-world interference (and thus interferencevalues) used by the power control algorithm.

The estimation of the transfer gains and the post beamforminginterference power is done efficiently in the preferred embodiment withsimple least squares estimation techniques.

The problem of estimating the transfer gains and the post beamforminginterference power (in the preferred embodiment, by using a leastsquares algorithm) is equivalent to solving for the transfer gain h asfollows:y(n)=hgs(n)=ε(n)  EQ. 31where y(n) is the output of the beamformer at the time sample,

-   h≈w^(H) _(r)(q)H₂₁(q,q)g_(t)(q) whose square modulus is P_(rt)(q,q),

w_(r)(q) is the receive weight vector for link q,

g_(t)(q) is transmit weight vector for link q,

-   g is the square root of the transmit power π_(t)(q),-   s(n) is the transmitted complex symbol at time sample n,

and

-   ε(n) represents all of the remaining co-channel interference and    noise. (Indexing is dropped to avoid clutter.) Then y(n) is defined    as the output after applying the unit normalized despread weights to    the received data. This is simply the usual beamformer output    divided by the norm of the despread weights with respect to the    noise covariance matrix; and for many applications, this will be a    scaled multiple of the identity matrix.

Using a block of N samples of data, h is then estimated as:

$\begin{matrix}{h = \frac{\sum\limits_{n = 1}^{N}\;{{s^{*}(n)}{y(n)}}}{\sum\limits_{n = 1}^{N}\;{{{s(n)}}^{2}g}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 32}\end{matrix}$where h is the channel transfer gain,

-   s*(n) is the conjugate of s(n),-   y(n) is the output of the beamformer at the time sample n,-   and,

s(n) is the transmitted complex symbol at time sample n.

From this an estimation of the residual interference power, R_(ε), whichis identified with i₁(q) in Eq. 11 by:

$\begin{matrix}{R_{ɛ} = {\left\langle {{ɛ(n)}}^{2} \right\rangle = {\frac{1}{N}{\sum\limits_{n = 1}^{N}\;{\left( {{{y(n)}}^{2} - {{g\; h\;{s(n)}}}^{2}} \right).}}}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 33}\end{matrix}$

where

gh is the product of the transmit gain and the post-beamforming channelgain.

The knowledge of the transmitted data symbols s(n) in the preferredembodiment comes from using remodulated symbols at the output of thecodec. Alternative embodiments use the output of a property restoralalgorithm used in a blind beamforming algorithm such as constant modulusor constellation restoral, or by using a training sequence explicitlytransmitted to train beamforming weights and assist the power managementalgorithms, or other means known to the art. This information, and theknowledge of the data transmit power values π₁(q) will be at thereceiver and can be transmitted to the transmitter as part of a datalink layer message; and if the processing occurs over fairly largeblocks of data the transfer consumes only a small portion of theavailable bandwidth. Means for handling the case when a transmit mode isshut off, so that one of the π₁(q)=0, include removing the index (q)from the optimization procedure and making no channel measurements.

In the preferred embodiment, a link level optimizer and decisionalgorithm (See FIGS. 32A and 32B) is incorporated in each node; itsinputs include the target and the bounds for that node, and its outputsinclude the new transmit powers and indications to the network as to howthe node is satisfying the constraints. FIG. 33 indicates a decisionalgorithm used by the link level optimizer.

In an alternative embodiment, the solution to Eq. 3 is implemented byusing a variety of Lagrange multiplier techniques. In other alternativeembodiments, the solution to Eq. 3 is implemented by using a variety ofpenalty function techniques. All of these embody techniques known to theart for solving the local problem. One such alternative takes thederivative of γ_((q)) with respect to π₁ and uses the Kronecker-Deltafunction and the weighted background noise; in separate alternativeembodiments, the noise term can be neglected or normalized to one. Anapproximation uses the receive weights, particularly when null-steeringefforts are being made, and as the optimal solution will have weightsthat approach the singular vectors of the interference-whitened MIMOchannel response. In the situation where the links of a given aggregateset Q(m) are all connected to a single node in the network, allinformation pertaining to the subchannels and propagation modes of theMIMO channel associated with that node are available, hence the normsquared transfer gain P₂₁(q,q) is available for all q∈Q(m) from theprocessing used to obtain the MMSE receive beamforming weights.

In the preferred embodiment, adaptation of the power is done in a seriesof measured and quantized descent steps and ascent steps, to minimizethe amount of control bits that need to be supported by the network.However, in an alternative embodiment, a node may use more bits ofcontrol information to signal for and quantize large steps.

Various alternative methods can be used to develop the local model foreach node. The preferred embodiment's use of measured data (e.g.function values or gradients) to develop the local model valid invicinity of the current parameter values, is only one approach; it can,however, be readily optimized within the node and network. The usualmodel of choice in prior art has been the quadratic model, but this wasinadequate as elements of the functions are monotic, One alternativeembodiment is to use a log-linear fractional model:

$\begin{matrix}{{\beta_{q} \approx {\log\left( \frac{{a\;{\pi_{1}(q)}} + a_{0}}{{b\;{\pi_{1}(q)}} + b_{0}} \right)}} = {{\hat{\beta}}_{q}\left( {\pi_{1}(q)} \right)}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 34}\end{matrix}$where β_(q) is the achievable bit capacity as a function of the transmitgains π₁(q);

-   and to characterize the inequality    {circumflex over (β)}_(q)(π₁(q))≧β  EQ. 35    with a linear half-subspace, and then solving the approximation    problem with a simple low dimensional linear program.

Another alternative embodiment develops the local mode by matchingfunction values and gradients between the current model and the actualfunction. And another develops the model as a solution to the leastsquares fit, evaluated over several points.

Because of the isolating effect of the transmit and receive weights thefact that the transmit weights for the other nodes in the network maychange mitigates the effect on the local model for each node. Yetanother alternative broadens the objective function to include theeffect of other links in the network, viewing them as responding to someextent to the transmit values of the current link q. A finer embodimentreduces the cross-coupling effect by allowing only a subset of links toupdate at any one particular time, wherein the subset members are chosenas those which are more likely to be isolated from one another.

In the preferred embodiment, and as shown in the figures, Node 2optimizes the receiver weights during the uplink (when sending) using aMMSE function; then measures the SINR over all paths k for a particularchannel q, and informs the sending node 1 both of the measured capacityfor channel q, that is, (D₁₂(q)) and, if the measured capacityexperienced for that channel is too high, to lower the power, or, if themeasured capacity for that channel is too low, to increase the power,with the power increase or decrease being done by small, discreteincrements. Node 2 then sets, for that channel, the transmit weights tothe receive weights and repeats this sub-process for the downlink case.By successive, rapid iteration node 2 rapidly informs node 1 of theprecise transmission power needed at node 1 to communicate over channelq with node 2.

This process is performed for every channel q which is active at node 2,until either the target capacity is attained, or the capacity cannot beimproved further. It is also repeated at every node in the network, sonode 1 will be telling node 2 whether node 2 must increase or decreasethe power for node 2's transmissions to node 1 over channel q.

In an alternative embodiment, the network contains one or more networkcontrollers, each of whom govern a subset of the network. The networkcontroller initiates, monitors, and changes the target objective (in thepreferred alternative embodiment, capacity) for the set of nodes itgoverns and communicates the current objective to those nodes and therest of the network as necessary. (See FIG. 33.) Different sub-networkscan use different capacity objectives depending on each network'slocalized environment (both external and internal, i.e. trafficdensity).

The network controller, once it has initialized the reciprocal set andobjective continually monitors the network of nodes it governs,continually compares if the desired capacity has been reached, and foreach node n, perform a fitting function. If a node n is compliant withthe power constraints and capacity bound, then R₁(n) should be reducedby a small amount; but if node n has both power constraints and capacityviolations than R₁(n) should be incremented for that node. Theseincrements and decrements are preferably quantized to fixed smallnumbers. In an alternative embodiment of the invention the scalar andhistory of the increments and decrements are recorded to feed intoexperientially modified approximations, effectively embodying areal-world adaptation learning for each node.

One important consequence of this approach is that compliance with anynetwork constraint or objective can be conveyed with a single hit, andincrement or decrement with two bits, thereby reducing the controloverhead to a minimum.

From the Butler Mode Forming element received signals are first passedthrough the frequency channel bank, then mapped to the FDMA channels.The received data on channel k will be passed through both the MultilinkReceive weight adaptation algorithm and the Multilink diversitycombining, Receive weights W(k) element, which in turn both feed intothe Multilink LEGO gain adaptation algorithm and thus feed-back into themultilink diversity distribution element for outgoing transmissions. TheMultilink Receive weight adaptation algorithm passes the adapted datafrom channel k over to the Multilink Diversity combining, ReceiveWeights W(k) element passes on the signal to both the circuits for theEqualization algorithm and the Delay/ITI/pilot-gating removal bank, thatstrips out the channel-coordinating information and passes the nowcombined signal to the symbol decoder bank to be turned into theinformation which had been sent out from the originating transceiver,the inverse process, generally, from the symbol encoding at thetransmission end.

These Signal Encoding Operations are graphically displayed in FIG. 21.(Because the decoding is both the inverse and well enough known, given aparticular encoding, to be within the state of the art for anypractitioner in the field, there is not a for the inverse, SymbolDecoding Operations.) A given signal, such as an IP datagram, is formedinto a fragment and passed along to a MUX element. (Any signal which canbe equated to or converted into an IP datagram, for example an ATM,would either be converted prior to this point or handled similarly.) Thedesired MAC header data, which in one alternative embodiment isoptionally time-stamped, is also fed into the same MUX element where thetwo combine. This combined signal now passes through a CRC generator aswell as feeding into a second MUX that combines the CRC output with it.Next, the signal passes into an encryption element that also performstrellis encoding. (In an alternative embodiment one or both of theseoperations are eliminated, which reduces the transceiver's hardware andsoftware complexity but decreases the network's security andreliability.) (For more information on the alternative use of Trelliscoded modulation, see, Boulle, et al., “An Overview of Trellis CodedModulation Research in COST 231”, IEEE PIMRC '94, pp. 105-109.) Thenow-encoded signal is next passed to the element where it is mapped tothe individual tones and the MT symbols, and where buffer tones and timeand frequency interleaving is done. A second, optional, delaypreemphasis signal element, and a third signal element from a pilotgenerator, taking input from the originating node, recipient node,group, or network, or any combination or sub-combination thereof, noware combined with the signal from the mapping element in a MUX. This MUXmay use the first two slots for a pilot without modulation by theinformation tones, using the remaining slots for the pilot modulated bythe information tones to further harden the pilot/signal combination. Analternative embodiment would at this point further pass the transmissionsignal through an ITI pre-distortion element; otherwise, thenow-encoded, piloted, and mapped transmission signal is ready.

Pilot tone generation, summarily disclosed on FIG. 21, is furtherdetailed in FIG. 28. Information concerning one or more of theoriginating node, recipient node, and network or group channelorganization flow into a pilot signal generator, and the resulting pilotsignal is further modified by a network code mask. This multilayer maskthen is used to form a signal with a pseudorandom sequence that isshared by all nodes in the same network or group, though the sequencemay vary over channels and MT symbols to allow further coordinationamongst them at the receiving end. Passing on the signal is modified inan element-wise multiplication (typically a matrix operation, embeddedin hardware) by a signal that indexes on the originating node, which inan optional variation includes a nodal pseudodelay, unique to that nodein the network or group, which overlay again may vary over channels andframes to improve security. The originating node index overlay is acomplex, exponential phase ramping. The combined signal now mixes with arecipient node index, another pseudorandom sequence that is unique tothe recipient node, modifying the whole in a second element-wisemultiplication. Thus the final pilot tone reflects the content signal,modified to uniquely identify both the originating node and its context,and the receiving node and its context, effecting a signal compositionthat allows the network to pilot the communication through the networkfrom origin to destination regardless of the intervening channels ittakes.

When a communication is transmitted, it will be received; and the MIMOreception is, like the transmission, adaptive. See FIG. 30, detailingthe logical processing involved. Received data passes through both aMultilink weight adaptation algorithm and (to which that part iscombined) a Multilink diversity combining of the Reception weights. Thisreweighted transmission now passes through the equalization algorithmand (to which that is combined) a Delay/ITI/pilot-gating removal bankstage. These sort out the properly weighted tones, perform therecombinations, and undo the pilot-gating distortion to effectivelyreassemble at the reception end the symbol pattern of the originalsignal. That now passes through a symbol decoder bank to recover themessage from the symbolic representation and the whole now is joinedwith the other received and linked messages for final reassembly. Thefunctional and firmware processing (fixed logic hardware, limitedpurpose firmware, or combined software, processors and circuitry), Thereceived symbol x(i,1) comprising a matrix combination of L Link and Mmultitone elements, is first modified by the pilot tone generator thatsends the recipient node, network, and group modifications for anelement-wise reverse multiplication, to strip off that component of thesignal and identify if the received symbol is from any originatingsource trying to send to this particular recipient. If the recipientpilot signal matches, then the signal passed on to a circuit, thatseparates the pilot signal elements from the data signal elements. Thepilot signal elements are passed through a link detection circuit thatpreferentially uses a FFT-LS algorithm to produce link qualitystatistics for that particular received transmission, identifies theweighting elements that were contained in the pilot signal and passesthose over to the multilink combination circuit, and sends the pilotweights over to the circuit for equalizing weight calculations. The datasignal, combined with the pilot weighting elements, now is combined withthe equalizer calculated factors to strip off all pilot information fromthe traffic data, Next, the re-refined traffic data passes through alink demodulator to produce the original channel-by-channel link streamsof data. In an alternative embodiment, the first channel, which has beenreserved for decryption, decoding, and error detection signal ling, notpasses through the ITI correction circuitry and thence to theinstantiated decryption, decoding, or retransmission circuitry asindicated by the data elements of the first channel signal; meanwhile,the remaining data channel elements are available having been refinedfrom the combined received elements.

A MIMO transceiver contains and uses simultaneously a multiple of singleRF feeds. A signal passes between the Butler Mode Forming element and aBand Pass Filter, or preselection, element, and then between the BandPass Filter element and the Transceiver switch. If the signal is beingtransmitted, it goes through a Low Noise Amplifier element and then bockinto the Transceiver switch; if the signal is being received, it goesthrough a Phase Amplifier and back into the Transceiver switch. Thesignal passes between the Transceiver switch and the Frequencytranslator, and then back into the Transceiver switch.

In the Frequency translator (FIG. 25), the signal passes through asecond Band Pass Filter with a Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) Frequencygreater than three, then between that second Band Pass Filter and afirst mixer, where it will be mixed (or unmixed, depending on direction)with (or by) another waveform which has come from the timing element(s),which may be any of the system clock, synchronization subsystem, and OPStime transfer, or their combination. The combined timing and contentsignal passes between the first mixer and a SAW element where it iscombined (or separated) with a saw frequency of less than or equal to1.35 times that of the signal. The SAW-modified signal passes betweenthe SAW element and a second mixer, where the saw-modified signal ismixed (or unmixed, depending on direction) by the waveform which alsohas come from the timing element(s) mentioned above. The signal passesbetween the second mixer and the LIT element with a SAW Frequencygreater than three; the next transition is between the frequencytranslator and the Transceiver switch. Depending on the direction of thesignal, it passes between the Transceiver switch and the ADC element orthe DAC element (the ADC and DAC together are ‘the converter elements’)and the Transceiver switch, and between the ADC element and the FFT/IFFTelement or between the FFT/IFFT element and the DAC element. Both theDAC and ADC elements are linked to and governed by the system clock,while the signal's passage through the Transceiver switch and the otherelements (LNA or PA, Frequency Translator, and between the Transceiverswitch and the converter elements, is governed by the Switch Controllerelement. This approach is used because the Frequency Translator can beimplemented as a single piece of hardware which lowers the cost of theoverall unit and lessens the signal correction necessary.

Different multitone formats are used at different transceivers, therebyenabling ready distinction by and amongst the receivers of thetransmitter frequency tone set. For fixed transceivers (BS or fixed SU),rectangular windows with cyclic prefixes and/or buffers are used; formobile transceivers, non-rectangular windows and guard times are used.This provides the network with a capacity fall-back as the networkenvironment and traffic dynamics vary. In the preferred embodiment theguard times are matched to the cyclic prefixes and buffers, themultitone QAM symbols are matched at all windows, and the differentwindows and capacity are used in different modes.

The multitone (multifrequency) transmission that occurs between everypair of nodes when they form a communications link exploits themultipath phenomena to achieve high QoS results. Each node, when it isacting as a receiver, optimizes the receive weights, using the MMSEtechnique. This goes directly against Varanesi's assessment that“de-correlative and even linear MMSE strategies are ill-advised for suchchannels because they either do not exist, and even if they do, they areplagued by large noise-enhancement factors”.

An alternative embodiment uses the Max SINR technique, and anycombination of these and other industry-standard receiver optimizationalgorithms are feasible alternative implementations. Then the transmitweights for that node in its reply are optimized by making themproportional to the receive weights. Finally, the transmit gains (gainmultipliers that multiply the transmit weights) are optimized accordingto a max-min capacity criterion for that node, such as the max-min sumof link capacities for that transceiver node at that particular time. Analternative embodiment includes as part of the network one or morenetwork controllers that assist in tuning the local nodes' maximumcapacity criterion to network constraints, e.g. by enforcing a balancingthat reflects an intermediate nodes' current capacity which is lowerthan the local, originating node's current capacity.

The MIMO network model for the aggregate data transmitted between N₁“Set 1 nodes” {n₁(1), . . . , n₁(N₁)}, receiving data over downlink timeslots and transmitting data over uplink time slots, and N₂ “Set 2 nodes”{n₂(1), . . . , n₂(N₂)} receiving data over uplink time slots andtransmitting data over downlink time slots, can be approximated byx ₂(k,l)≈i ₂(k,l)+H ₂₁(k,l)s ₁(k,l)  EQ. 36(uplink network channel model)x ₁(k,l)≈i ₁(k,l)+H ₁₂(k,l)s ₂(k,l)  EQ. 37(downlink network channel model)within frequency-time channel (k,l) (e.g., tone k within OFDM symbol l)transmitted and received at uplink frequency f₂₁ (k) and time t₂₁ (l)and downlink frequency f₁₂ (k) and time t₁₂(l), where

-   -   s₁(k,l)=[s^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(1)) . . . s^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(N₁))]^(T)        represents the network signal vector transmitted from nodes        {n₁(p)} within uplink channel (k,l);    -   s₂(k,l)=[s^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(1)) . . . s^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(N₂))]^(T)        represents the network signal vector transmitted from nodes {n₂        (q)} within downlink channel (k,l);    -   x₁(k,l)=[x^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(1)) . . . x^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(N₁))]^(T)        represents the network signal vector received at nodes {n₁(p)}        within downlink channel (k,l);    -   x₂(k,l)=[x^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(1)) . . . x^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(N₂))]^(T)        represents the network signal vector received at nodes {n₂(q)}        within uplink channel (k,l);    -   i₁(k,l)=[i^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(1)) . . . i^(T) ₁(k,l; n₁(N₁))]^(T)        models the network interference vector received at nodes {n₁(p)}        within downlink channel (k,l);    -   i₂(k,l)=[i^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(1)) . . . i^(T) ₂(k,l; n₂(N₂))]^(T)        models the network interference vector received at nodes {n₂(q)}        within uplink channel (k,l);    -   H₂₁(k,l)[H₂₁ (k,l; n₂(q), n₁(p))] models the channel response        between transmit nodes {n₁(p)} and receive nodes {n₂ (q)} within        uplink channel (k, l); and    -   H₁₂(k,l)=[H₁₂ (k,l; n₁(p), n₂ (q))] models the channel response        between transmit nodes {n₂ (q)} and receive nodes {n₁(p)} within        downlink channel (k,l);        and ( )^(T) denotes the matrix transpose operation, and where    -   s₁(k,l; n₁) represents the M₁(n₁)×1 node n₁ signal vector        transmitted over M₁(n₁) diversity channels (e.g., antenna feeds)        within uplink frequency-time channel (k,l);    -   s₂(k,l; n₂) represents the M₂(n₂)×1 node n₂ signal vector        transmitted over M₂(n₂) diversity channels within downlink        frequency-time channel (k, l);    -   x₁(k,l; n₁) represents the node n₁ signal vector received over        M₁(n₁ diversity channels within downlink frequency-time channel        (k, l);    -   x₂(k,l; n₂) represents the M₂(n₂)×1 node n₂ signal vector        received over M₂(n₂) diversity channels within uplink        frequency-time channel (k, l);    -   i₁(k, l; n₁) models the M₁(n₁)×1 node n₁ interference vector        received over M₁(n₁) diversity channels within downlink        frequency-time channel (k, l);    -   i₂(k, l; n₂) models the M₂(n₂)×1 node n₂ interference vector        received over M₂(n₂) diversity channels within uplink        frequency-time channel (k, l);    -   H₂₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) models the M₂(n₂)×M₁(n₁) channel response        matrix between transmit node n₁ and receive node n₂ diversity        channels, within uplink channel (k, l); and    -   H₁₂(k, l; n₁, n₂) models the M₁(n₁)×M₂ (n₂) channel response        matrix between transmit node n₂ and receive node n₁ diversity        channels, within downlink channel (k, l).        In the absence of far-field multipath between individual nodes,        H₂₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) and H₁₂(k, l; n₁, n₂) can be further        approximated by rank 1 matrices:        H ₂₁(k,l;n ₂ ,n ₁)≈λ₂₁(n ₁ ,n ₂)a ₂(f ₂₁(k),t ₂₁(l);n ₁ ,n ₂)a        ^(T) ₁(f ₂₁(k),t ₂₁(l);n ₂ ,n ₁)×exp{−j2π(τ₂₁(n ₂ ,n ₁)f ₂₁(k)−ν        ₂₁(n ₂ ,n ₁)t ₁₂(l))}]   EQ. 38        H ₁₂(k,l;n ₁ ,n ₂)≈λ₁₂(n ₂ ,n ₁)a ₁(f ₁₂(k),t ₁₂(l);n ₂ ,n ₁)a        ^(T) ₂(f ₁₂(k),t ₁₂(l);n ₁ ,n ₂)×exp{−j2π(τ₁₂(n ₁ ,n ₂)f ₁₂(k)−ν        ₁₂(n ₁ ,n ₂)t ₁₂(l))}   EQ. 39        where    -   λ₂₁(n₂, n₁ models the observed uplink pathloss and phase shift        between transmit node n₁ and receive node n₂;    -   λ₁₂(n₁, n₂) models the observed downlink pathloss and phase        shift between transmit node n₂ and receive node n₁;    -   τ₂₁ (n₂, n₁) models the observed uplink timing offset (delay)        between transmit node n₁ and receive node n₂;    -   τ₁₂ (n₁, n₂) models the observed downlink timing offset between        transmit node n₂ and receive node n₁;    -   ν₂₁ (n₂, n₁) models the observed uplink carrier offset between        transmit node n₁ and receive node n₂;    -   ν₁₂ (n₁, n₂) models the observed downlink carrier offset between        transmit node n₂ and receive node n₁;    -   a₁(f,t; n₂, n₁) models the M₁(n₁)×1 node n₁ channel response        vector, between node n₂ and each diversity channel used at node        n₁, at frequency f and time t; and    -   a₂(f,t; n₁, n₂) models the M₂(n₂)×1 node n₂ channel response        vector, between node n₁ and each diversity channel used at node        n₂, at frequency f and time t.

In many applications, for example, many airborne and satellitecommunication networks, channel response vector a₁(f,t; n₂, n₁) can becharacterized by the observed (possibly time-varying) azimuth andelevation {(θ₁ (t; n₂, n₁), φ₁ (f,t; n₂, n₁)} of node n₂ observed at n₁.In other applications, for example, many terrestrial communicationsystems, a₁(f,t; n₂, n₁) can be characterized as a superposition ofdirect-path and near-field reflection path channel responses, e.g., dueto scatterers in the vicinity of n₁, such that each element of a₁(f,t;n₂, n₁) can be modeled as a random process, possibly varying over timeand frequency. Similar properties hold for a₂(f,t; n₁, n₂).

In either case, a₁(f,t; n₂, n₁) and a₂(f,t; n₁, n₂) can be substantivelyfrequency invariant over significant breadths of frequency, e.g.,bandwidths commensurate with frequency channelization used in 2G and2.5G communication systems. Similarly, a₁(f,t; n₂, n₁) and a₂(f,t; n₁,n₂) can be substantively time invariant over significant time durations,e.g., large numbers of OFDM symbols or TDMA time frames. In these cases,the most significant frequency and time variation is induced by theobserved timing and carrier offset on each link.

In many networks of practical interest, e.g., TDD networks, the transmitand receive frequencies are identical (f₂₁(k)=f₁₂(k)=f(k)) and thetransmit and receive time slots are separated by short time intervals(t₂₁(l)=t₁₂(l) Δ₂₁≈t(l)), and H₂₁ (k, l) and H₂₁ (k, l) becomesubstantively reciprocal, such that the subarrays comprising H₂₁ (k, l)and H₂₁ (k, l) satisfy H₂₁(k, l; n₂, n₁)≈δ₂₁(k, l; n₁, n₂) H^(T) ₁₂ (k,l; n₁, n₂), where δ₂₁(k, l; n₁, n₂ is a unit-magnitude, generallynonreciprocal scalar.

If the observed timing offsets, carrier offsets, and phase offsets arealso equalized, such that λ₂₁(n₂, n₁)≈λ₁₂(n₁, n₂), τ₂₁(n₂, n₁)≈τ₁₂ (n₁,n₂), and ν₂₁ (n₂, n₁)≈ν₁₂ (n₁, n₂), for example, by synchronizing eachnode to an external, universal time and frequency standard such asGlobal Position System Universal Time Coordinates (GPS UTC), then δ₂₁(k, l; n₁, n₂)≈1 can be obtained and the network channel responsebecomes truly reciprocal, H₂₁ (k, l)≈H^(T) ₁₂ (k, l). However, this morestringent level of reciprocity is not required to obtain the primarybenefit of the invention.

In order to obtain substantive reciprocity, each node in the networkmust possess means for compensating local differences between transmitand reception paths. Methods for accomplishing this using probe antennasare described in Agee, et. al. (U.S. patent application Ser. No.08/804,619, referenced above). A noteworthy advantage of this inventionis that substantive reciprocity can be obtained using only localtransmit/receive compensation means.

The channel model described above is extendable to applications wherethe internode channel responses possess substantive multipath, such thatH₂₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) and H₁₂(k, l; n₂, n₁) have rank greater than unity.This channel response can also be made substantively reciprocal, suchthat the primary benefit of the invention can be obtained here.

The preferred embodiment uses a substantively null-steering networkwherein each node transmits baseband data (complex symbols provided by amultirate codec) through the multiplicity of reciprocal linear matrixoperations prior to transmission into the antenna array during transmitoperations, and after reception by the antenna array during receiveoperations, in a manner that physically separates messages intended forseparate recipients. This is accomplished by

-   (1) forming uplink and downlink transmit signals using the matrix    formula    s ₁(k,l;n ₁)=G ₁(k,l;n ₁)d ₁(k,l;n ₁)  EQ. 40    s ₂(k,l;n ₁)=G ₂(k,l;n ₂)d ₂(k,l;n ₂)    where    d ₁(k,l;n ₁)=[d ₁(k,l;n ₂(1),n ₁) . . . d ₁(k,l;n ₂(N ₂),n ₁)]^(T)    -   represents the vector of complex data symbols transmitted from        node n₁ and intended for each of nodes {n₂(q)}, respectively,        within uplink channel (k, l);        d ₂(k,l;n ₂)=[d ₂(k,l;n ₁(1),n ₂) . . . d ₂(k,l;n ₁(N ₁),n        ₂)]^(T)    -   represents the vector of complex data symbols transmitted from        node n₂ and intended for each of nodes {n₁(q)}, respectively,        within downlink channel (k, l);        G ₁(k,l;n ₁)=[g ₁(k,l;n ₂(1),n ₁) . . . g ₁(k,l;n ₂(N ₂),n ₁)]    -   represents the complex distribution weights used to redundantly        distribute symbol vector d₁(k, l; n₁) onto each diversity        channel employed at node n₁ within uplink channel (k, l); and        G ₂(k,l;n ₂)=[g ₂(k,l;n ₁(1),n ₂) . . . g ₂(k,l;n ₁(N ₁),n ₂)]    -   represents the complex distribution weights used to redundantly        distribute symbol vector d₂(k, l; n₂) onto each diversity        channel employed at node n₂ within downlink channel (k, l);-   (2) reconstructing the data intended for each receive node using the    matrix formula    y ₁(k,l;n ₁)=W ^(H) ₁(k,l;n ₁)x ₁(k,l;n ₁)  EQ. 41    y ₂(k,l;n ₂)=W ^(H) ₂(k,l;n ₂)x ₂(k,l;n ₂)    where ( )^(H) denotes the conjugate-transpose (Hermitian transpose)    operation, and where    y ₁(k,l;n ₁)=[y ₁(k,l;n ₂(1),n ₁) . . . y ₁(k,l;n ₂(N ₂),n ₁)]^(T)    -   represents the vector of complex data symbols intended for node        n₁ and transmitted from each of nodes {n₂ (q)}, respectively,        within downlink channel (k, l);    -   y₂(k,l;n₂)=[y₂(k,l;n₁(1),n₂) . . . y₂(k,l;n₁(N₁),n₂)]^(T)        represents {n₁(p)}, respectively, within uplink channel (k, l);        W ₁(k,l;n ₁)=[w ₁(k,l;n ₂(1),n ₁) . . . w ₁(k,l;n ₂(N ₂),n ₁)]    -   represents the complex combiner weights used at node n₁ to        recover symbol symbols {d₁(k,l;n₂(q), n₁)} intended for node n₁        and transmitted from nodes {n₂(q)} within uplink channel (k, l);        and        W ₂(k,l;n ₂)=[w ₂(k,l;n ₁(1),n ₂) . . . w ₂(k,l;n ₁(N ₁),n ₂)]    -   represents the complex combiner weights used at node n₂ to        recover symbol symbols {d₂ (k, l; n₁(p), n₂)} intended for node        n₂ and transmitted from nodes {n₁ (p)} within uplink channel (k,        l).-   (3) developing combiner weights that {w₁ (k, l; n₂, n₁)} and {w₂(k,    l; n₁, n₂)} that substantively null data intended for recipients    during the symbol recovery operation, such that for n₁≠n₂;    |w ^(H) ₁(k,l;n ₂ ,n ₁)a ₁(f ₁₂(k),t ₁₂(l);n ₂ ,n ₁)|<<|w ^(H)    ₁(k,l;n ₁ ,n ₁)a ₁(f ₁₂(k),t ₁₂(l);n ₁ ,n ₁)|  EQ. 42-   and    |w ^(H) ₂(k,l;n ₁ ,n ₂)a ₂(f ₂₁(k),t ₂₁(l);n ₁ ,n ₂)|<<|w ^(H)    ₂(k,l;n ₂ ,n ₂)a ₂(f ₂₁(k),t ₂₁(l);n ₂ ,n ₂)|  EQ. 43-   (4) developing distribution weights {g₁(k, l; n₂, n₁)} and {g₂(k, l;    n₁, n₂)} that perform equivalent substantive nulling operations    during transmit signal formation operations;-   (5) scaling distribution weights to optimize network capacity and/or    power criteria, as appropriate for the specific node topology and    application addressed by the network;-   (6) removing residual timing and carrier offset remaining after    recovery of the intended network data symbols; and-   (7) encoding data onto symbol vectors based on the end-to-end SINR    obtainable between each transmit and intended recipient node, and    decoding that data after symbol recovery operations, using channel    coding and decoding methods develop in prior art.

In the preferred embodiment, OFDM modulation formats is used toinstantiate the invention, and substantively similar distribution andcombining weights are computed and applied over as broad a range oftones (frequency channels k) and OFDM symbols (time slots l) as ispractical. The range of practical use is determined by the frequencyselectivity (delay spread) and time selectivity (Doppler spread) of thecommunications channel, which determines the degree of invariance of thechannel response vectors a₁ and a₂ on (k, l); the dynamics ofinterference i₁ and i₂; latency requirements of the communicationsnetwork; and dimensionality of linear combiners used at each node in thenetwork, which determine the number of frequency-time channels needed todetermine reliable substantively null-steering distribution andcombining weights.

In the preferred embodiment, substantively nulling combiner weights areformed using an FFT-based least-squares algorithms that adapt {w₁ (k, l;n₂, n₁)} and {w₂(k, l; n₁, n₂)} to values that minimize the mean-squareerror (MSE) between the combiner output data and a known segment oftransmitted pilot data. Operations used to implement this techniqueduring receive and transmit operations are shown in FIGS. 35 and 36,respectively. The preferred pilot data is applied to an entire OFDMsymbol at the start of an adaptation frame comprising a single OFDMsymbol containing pilot data followed by a stream of OFDM symbolscontaining information data. The pilot data transmitted over the pilotsymbol is preferably given by

$\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{{p_{1}\left( {{k;n_{2}},n_{1}} \right)} = {d_{1}\left( {k,{1;n_{2}},n_{1}} \right)}} \\{= {{p_{01}(k)}\;{p_{21}\left( {k;n_{2}} \right)}{p_{11}\left( {k;n_{1}} \right)}}}\end{matrix} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 44} \\\begin{matrix}{{p_{2}\left( {{k;n_{1}},n_{2}} \right)} = {d_{2}\left( {k,{1;n_{1}},n_{2}} \right)}} \\{= {{p_{02}(k)}{p_{12}\left( {k;n_{1}} \right)}{p_{22}\left( {k;n_{2}} \right)}}}\end{matrix} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 45}\end{matrix}$where symbol index l is referenced to the start of the adaptation frame,and where

-   -   p₀₁(k) is a pseudorandom, constant modulus uplink “network” or        “subnet” pilot that is known and used at each node in a network        or subnet;    -   p₀₂(k) is a pseudorandom, constant modulus downlink “network” or        “subnet” pilot that known and used at each node in the network;    -   p₂₁(k; n₂) is a pseudorandom, constant modulus uplink        “recipient” pilot that is known and used by every node intending        to transmit data to node n₂ during uplink transmission        intervals;    -   p₁₂(k; n_(t) is a pseudorandom, constant modulus downlink        “recipient” pilot that is known and used by every node intending        to transmit data to node n₁ during downlink transmission        intervals;    -   p₁₁(k; n₁)=exp {j2πδ₁(n₁)k} is a sinusoidal uplink “originator”        pilot that is used by node n₁ during uplink transmission        intervals;    -   p₂₂(k; n₂)=exp {j2πδ₂(n₂)k} is a sinusoidal downlink        “originator” pilot that is used by node n₂ during downlink        transmission intervals;

The “pseudodelays” δ₁(n₁) and δ₂(n₂) can be unique to each transmit node(in small networks), or provisioned at the beginning of communicationwith any given recipient node (in which case each will be a function ofn₁ and n₂). In either case, the minimum spacing between any pseudodelaysused to communicate with a given recipient node should be larger thanthe maximum expected timing offset observed at that recipient node. Thisspacing should also be an integer multiple of 1/K, where K is the numberof tones used in a single FFT-based LS algorithm. If K is not largeenough to provide a sufficiency of pseudodelays, additional OFDM symbolscan be used for transmission of pilot symbols, either lengthening theeffective value of K, or reducing the maximum number of originatingnodes transmitting pilot symbols over the same OFDM symbol (for example,the recipient node can direct 4 originators to transmit their pilotsymbols over the first OFDM symbol in each adaptation frame, and 4 otheroriginators to transmit their pilot symbols over the next OFDM symbol,allowing the recipient node to construct combiner weights for 8originators). In the preferred embodiment, K should also be large enoughto allow effective combiner weights to be constructed from the pilotsymbols alone. The remaining information-bearing symbols in theadaptation frame are then given byd ₁(k,l;n ₂ ,n ₁)=p ₁(k;n ₂ ,n ₁)d ₀₁(k,l;n ₂ ,n ₁)  EQ. 46d ₂(k,l;n ₁ ,n ₂)=p ₂(k;n ₁ ,n ₂)d ₀₂(k,l;n ₁ ,n ₂)  EQ. 47where d₀₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) and d₀₂ (k, l; n₁, n₂) are the uplink anddownlink data symbols provided by prior encoding, encryption, symbolrandomization, and channel preemphasis stages.

Preferably, the adaptation frame is tied to the TDD frame, such that theTDD frame comprises an integer number of adaptation frames transmittedin one link direction, followed by an integer number of adaptationframes transmitted in the reverse link direction. However, the OFDMsymbols in the adaptation frame may be interleaved to some degree or anydegree. The pilot data may also be allowed to pseudorandomly varybetween adaptation frames, providing an additional layer of “physicallayer” encryption in secure communication networks.

At the recipient node, the pseudorandom pilot components are firstremoved from the received data by multiplying each tone and symbol bythe pseudorandom components of the pilot signalsx ₀₁(k,l;n ₁)=c ₀₂(k;n ₁)x ₁(k,l;n ₁)  EQ. 53x ₀₂(k,l;n ₂)=c ₀₁(k;n ₂)x ₂(k,l;n ₂)  EQ. 48where c₀₂(k; n₁)=[p₀₂(k) p₁₂(k; n₁)]* and c₀₁(k; n₂)=[p₀₁(k) p₂₁(k;n₂)]* are the derandomizing code sequences.

This operation transforms each pilot symbol authorized and intended forthe recipient node into a complex sinusoid with a slope proportional tothe sum of the pseudodelay used during the pilot generation procedure,and the actual observed timing offset for that link (observedpseudodelay). (See. FIGS. 21, 28.) Unauthorized pilot symbols, andsymbols intended for other nodes in the network, are not so transformedand continue to appear as random noise at the recipient node (See FIG.38A, 38B).

The FFT-based LS algorithm is shown in FIG. 37. The pilot symbol,notionally denoted x₀(k,1) in this Figure (i.e., with reference touplink/downlink set and node index suppressed), is multiplied by aunit-norm FFT window function, and passed to a QR decompositionalgorithm, preferably a block modified-Gram-Schmidt Orthogonalization(MGSO), and used to compute orthogonalized data {q(k)} andupper-triangular Cholesky statistics matrix R. Each vector element of{q(k)} is then multiplied by the same window function, and passedthrough a zero-padded inverse Fast Fourier Transform (IFFT) with outputlength PK, with padding factor P, preferably P=4, to formuninterpolated, spatially whitened processor weights {u(m)}, where lagindex m is proportional to target pseudodelay δ(m)=m/PK. The whitenedprocessor weights are then used to estimate the mean-square-error (MSE)obtaining for a signal received at each target pseudodelay,ε(m)=1−∥u(m)∥², yielding a detection statistic (pseudodelay indicatorfunction) with a minimum (valley) at IFFT lags commensurate with theobserved pseudodelay (alternately, combiner output SINR γ(m)=ε⁻¹(m)−1can be measured at each target pseudodelay, yielding a detectionstatistic (peak) at FFT lags commensurate with that pseudodelay. Thepilot symbol, notionally denoted x₀(k, 1) in this Figure (i.e., withreference to uplink/downlink set and node index suppressed), ismultiplied by a unit-norm FFT window function, and passed to a QRdecomposition algorithm, preferably a block modified-Gram-SchmidtOrthogonalization (MGSO), and used to compute orthogonalized data {q(k)}and upper-triangular Cholesky statistics matrix R. Each vector elementof {q(k)} is then multiplied by the same window function, and passedthrough a zero-padded inverse Fast Fourier Transform (IFFT) with outputlength PK, with padding factor P, preferably P=4, to formuninterpolated, spatially whitened processor weights {u(m)}, where lagindex m is proportional to target pseudodelay δ(m)=m/PK. The whitenedprocessor weights are then used to estimate the mean-square-error (MSE)obtaining for a signal received at each target pseudodelay,ε(m)=1−∥u(m)∥², yielding a detection statistic (pseudodelay indicatorfunction) with a minimum (valley) at IFFT lags commensurate with theobserved pseudodelay (alternately, combiner output SINR γ(m)=ε⁻¹(m)−1can be measured at each target pseudodelay. The IFFT windowing functionis dependent on the minimum spacing between pseudodelays, and isdesigned to minimize interlag interference (“picket fence” effect)between pilot signal features in the pseudodelay indicator function. Inthe preferred embodiment, and for a node capable of forming four links,a Kaiser-Bessel window with parameter 3 is preferred.

A valley (or peak) finding algorithm is then used to detect each ofthese valleys (or peaks), estimate the location of the observedpseudodelays to sub-lag accuracy, and determine additional ancillarystatistics such as combiner output SINR, input SINR, etc., that areuseful to subsequent processing steps (e.g., LEGO). Depending on thesystem application, either the Q lowest valleys (highest peaks), or allvalleys below a designated MSE threshold (peaks above a designated SINRthreshold) are selected, and spatially whitened weights U areinterpolated from weights near the valleys (peaks). The whitenedcombiner weights U are then used to calculate both unwhitened combinerweights W=R⁻¹U, used in subsequent data recovery operations, and toestimate the received channel aperture matrix A=R^(H)U, to facilitateancillary signal quality measurements and fast network entry in futureadaptation frames. Lastly, the estimated and optimized pseudodelayvector δ_(*) is used to generate c₁(k)=exp {−j2πδ_(*)k} (conjugate of{p₁₁(k; n₁)} during uplink receive operations, and {p₂₂(k; n₂)} duringdownlink receive operations), which is then used to remove the residualobserved pseudodelay from the information bearing symbols. (See FIG.38A, items 702A, 704, 702B, 706, and FIG. 38B, Item 710, forillustration of the overall signal and the signal modified by thecorrect origination, target, and pilot mask.)

In an alternate embodiment, the pseudodelay estimation is refined usinga Gauss-Newton recursion using the approximationexp {−j2πΔ(k−k ₀)/PK}≈1−2πΔ(k−k ₀)/PKThis algorithm first estimates Δ, providing an initial sublag estimateof pseudodelay, before estimating the lag position to further accuracy.The resultant algorithm can reduce the padding factor P, and reducesinterpolation errors in the receive combination weights. However, itrequires estimation of an additional IFFT using a modified FFT window,and is therefore not preferred in applications where DSP complexity isof overriding importance.

The optimized combiner weights are substantively null-steering, in thatthe combiner weights associated with each originating signal will(notionally, in absence of multipath) form a composite antenna patternthat steers nulls in the direction of all other time-and-frequencycoincident signals (signals transmitting on the same time slot andfrequency channel) impinging on the array. However, the weights willalso (notionally, in absence of multipath) form a beam in the directionof the originating signal, further improving performance of the overallnetwork. In the presence of multipath, a clear gain pattern of this sortmay not necessarily form; however, the effect of this processing will bethe same, and is typically be improved due the added diversity providedby multipath.

In additional alternate embodiments, the combiner weights can be furtherrefined by exploiting known or added structure of the informationbearing symbols using blind property-restoral algorithms. Algorithms ofthis sort are described in Agee (U.S. Pat. No. 6,118,276) and Agee, et.al., (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/804,619, referenced above) aswell as other disclosures in the public domain. These alternateembodiments can reduce the size of K, or allow the airlink to beextended into more complex systems where the linear combinerdimensionalities are too large to allow computation of effective weightsgiven the value of K employed in an existing system.

The resultant network has several useful attributes over prior art. Itis computationally efficient, especially for nodes receiving data fromlarge numbers of originating nodes, since the complex operationsemployed in the FFT-LS algorithm can be amortized over multiple links.It is also rapidly convergent, allowing computation of 4-elementdiversity combiner weights to attain nearly the maximum SINR obtainableby the combiner using 8-to-16 pilot data tones. It automatically detectsand reconstructs data from nodes that have been authorized tocommunicate with the network, or with recipient nodes within thenetwork, and rejects nodes that are not so authorized, allowing thenetwork to adjust and control its topology and information flow at thephysical layer, and providing an important level of security byrejecting signals that do not possess appropriate network or recipientpilots. It also provides an additional level of data scrambling toprevent occurrence of correlated interlink symbol streams that can causesevere misadjustment in conventional linear combiner adaptationalgorithms.

In reciprocal channels, the linear combiner weights provided duringreceive operations can be used to simply construct linear distributionweights during subsequent transmit operations, by setting distributionweight g₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) proportional to w*₁(k, l; n₂, n₁) during uplinktransmit operations, and g₂(k, l; n₁, n₂) proportional to w*₂(k, l; n₁,n₂) during downlink transmit operations. The transmit weights will besubstantively nulling in this system, allowing each node to formfrequency and time coincident two-way links to every node in its fieldof view, with which it is authorized (through establishment of link setand transfer of network/recipient node information) to communicate.

Among other advantages, this capability allows nodes to independentlyadjust transmit power directed to other nodes in the network, forexample, to optimize capacity achievable at that node given the totalpower available to it, or to minimize power emitted into the network bythat node given an aggregate power requirement. This capability alsoallows the node to adjust its contribution to the overall network, forexample, to maximize the total aggregate (max-sum) capacity of thenetwork, or to minimize network power subject to a network-levelcapacity constraint. In addition, this capability can allow the node toprovide two-way communication to authorized nodes, or in definedsubnets, in the presence of other nodes or subnets that it is notauthorized to communicate with, for example, adjacent cells in CMRSnetworks, and adjacent (even interpenetrating), and virtual privatenets. In wireless LAN's and MAN's,

This capability is illustrated in FIGS. 39 and 40, the latter being fora hexagonal network of six nodes arranged in a ring network, with anadditional direct connect between nodes A and D. In this example, eachnode has been provided with a recipient pilot for its adjacent node,e.g., node B has been provided with recipient pilots for nodes A and C,facilitating time-frequency coincident communication with those adjacentnodes. In addition, Node A has been provided with recipient pilots fornode D, i.e., node A can communicate with nodes B, D, or F.

The pseudodelay indicator functions (provided as a function of SINR,i.e., with peaks at observed pseudodelays) are shown for each of thenodes. Indicator functions generated at nodes B, C, E, and F have twostrong peaks, corresponding to pseudodelays used at their connectingnodes, plus a 10 microsecond time-of-flight delay (assuming all nodesare synchronized to GPS UTC). In addition, nodes A and D have a thirdpeak at their respective delays, plus a 20 microsecond time-of-flightdelay. The pseudodelays are minimally separated by 25 microseconds foreach of the originating nodes (12.5 microsecond minimal separationbetween all nodes), which is easily wide enough to allow peaks fromdifferent originators to be discerned. In addition, the peak values(near 20 dB SINR for all links except the A-to-D link) are detectablewith a 0 dB threshold. As Figure ## shows, the receive and transmitweights form beam and null patterns that allow independent links to beformed between authorized nodes, and that allow unauthorized signals tobe screened at the points or reception and transmission.

The aperture estimates A will (also notionally, in absence of multipath)form beams in the direction of the originating node; however; they willignore all other nodes in the network. For this reason, they cannot beused in general to sustain independent links. However, the apertureestimates can be used to allow rapid reentry into the network, forexample, in packet data systems where users may quickly begin and endsignal transmissions over brief time periods (e.g., such that thechannel response has not changed substantively between transmissions).The aperture estimates can also be combined with combiner/distributionweights to form rapid nulls again other links or nodes in the network.

The primary application area for the fully adaptive MIMO arrays of thepreferred embodiment will be below 10 GHz, where the abilities toachieve non-LOS and to exploit multipath are still possible, and wherepathloss, weather effects, and channel dynamics can be handled byadaptive arrays. The preferred embodiment's MIMO network will provide astrong advantage over conventional MIMO links, by not requiring antennaseparation of 10 wavelengths to provide effective capacity gain. Thepresent state of the art considers 10 wavelengths to be the rule ofthumb for the distance between antennas that provides spatiallyindependent antenna feeds due to disparate multipath at each antenna.This rule has greatest applicability in worst-case mobile environmentssubject to Rayleigh fading, i.e., where the (typically much stronger)direct path is obscured, and propagation occurs over many equal-powerreflection paths.

The MIMO network of the preferred embodiment, however, exploits routediversity due to reception of signals from widely separated nodes, anddoes not need multipath to provide the capacity gains cited for MIMOlinks in the present state of the art. This enables the preferredembodiment to employ antennas with much smaller separation, e.g.,circular arrays with half-to-full wavelength diameter, to provideeffective capacity or QoS gains. The preferred embodiment's exploitationof multipath can further improve performance, by providing additionaldifferences between gain and phase induced at each antenna in the array.In this regards, a smaller aperture is also better, as it reducesfrequency selectivity across individual frequency channels. Polarizationdiversity can also be employed between antennas with arbitrary spacing(e.g., in “zero aperture” arrays), as well as “gain diversity” if theantennas have distinct gain patterns.

The MIMO network of the preferred embodiment has application in the10-100 GHz region (for example, LMDS bands around 25-35 GHz where meshnetworks are of increasing interest), even though these networks arelikely to employ nonadaptive directional antennas, or partially adaptiveantennas, e.g., arrays in focal plane of directional dish antennas, thatdirect high gain or “pencil” beams at other ends of the link, ratherthan fully adaptive beam-and-null steering networks. This is due tosmall form factor of such antennas, as well as pathloss, atmosphericabsorption, and weather effects prevalent above the 10 GHz band.

The next preference is that for each channel that is dynamicallyestablished, the uplink and downlink share a common frequency (that is,the transmission and reception are on the same frequency). This enablesthe establishment and exploitation of channel reciprocity (CR) betweenpairs of nodes, the sharing of antennae and diversity channels intransmit and receive operations in particular nodes, and other networkadvantages. The network advantages include the use of ad hoc,single-frequency networks in burst)/(data-intensive) networks, such aspacket-switched networks, random-access networks, or at the network“edges” (where the SINR level threatens to overcome the networkcapacity), This also allows the establishment of a two-layertime-division duplex schema in persistent networks or channels (e.g.ones that are circuit-switched, or perform connectionless datagrambackhaul functions), where there is an equal duty cycle in bothdirections. An alternative embodiment will permit asymmetric dutycycles, and yet a third configurable balancing of duty cycles.Additionally, in the multitone case of dual-frequency approach (uplinkand downlink using distinct frequencies), the network uses a frequencydivision duplex (FDD) protocol, preferably in combination withchannel-based transmission and reception weights.

The network advantage to the preferred embodiment is that, instead ofthe network serving as a Procrustean bed to which the communicationslinks must be fitted out of the combination of its environmental SINR,established protocols, and channel approach, each communications linkcan use the environmental SINR, protocols, and channel approach todynamically adapt the network's functioning to maximize capacity andminimize power consumption.

The second preference is that the network uses and exploits diversityfrequency transmission and reception at all nodes in the network. Thisparticular aspect of the preferred embodiment carries the complexity andhardware cost of requiring that each node incorporate spatiallyseparated and shared receive/transmit antennae, although the separationneed only be measured in tens of lambdas of the lowest frequency(longest wavelength) used by that particular node. This pragmaticallycan create a situation where BS nodes are equipped with larger antennaewhich are spatially separated by feet or meters, and thus use for lowerfrequencies for ‘backhaul’ or BS to BS transmissions; this also carries,however, the advantage that SU nodes lacking such spatial separationwill be intrinsically deaf to such frequencies. (Care must be taken toconsider harmonics between BS backbone frequencies and SU channelfrequencies.)

Optionally, in an enhancement to the preferred embodiment, the networkwould include and make use of frequency polarization, spectraldiversity, or any combination thereof, at any subset (including a propersubset) of the network's nodes to provide further coding anddifferentiation potential. And in another, further enhancement, thenetwork would employ Butler RF networks to provide common RF front-endand scalable and expandable transceiver DSP backends in peer-to-peernetwork implementations.

The third preference is that the nodes include a multitone QAM encoder,whereby individual tones would be multiplied byQuadrature-Amplitude-Modulated symbols to further differentiate thesignals between nodes, even those using the same frequencies.Alternative QAM approaches would include PSK, π/4 QPSK, and π/4-DQPSKsymbols to increase the variation potentialities. These symbols would begenerated using Trellis-Coded-Modulation (TM) encoding over individualfrequency channels and would include several-to-one multitone symbols.One alternative embodiment would use Reed-Solomon codes and directmapping to symbols; other alternatives would use Turbo encoding, eitherat the baseband or as part of the TM, or any combination thereof. To aidthe Viterbi decoding at the receiver the ‘tail-biting approach would beused at the edge of the symbol blocks. To assist the maximum capacitysolution for each frequency channel, the network would use variableinformation bits per frequency channel rather than a fixed set ofinformation bits per frequency channel, in a method analogous to theDigital MultiTone, Digital Signal Loss (DMT DSL) approach, trading theneed for information density encoding as part of the signal overhead forthe need for all channels to be constrained to the minimum guaranteedcapacity of any environmentally or hardware constrained channel, toavoid pathloss for the most tightly constrained link or channel.However, rather than insist upon this approach, the network wouldinclude the capability to shift to a constant bits per frequency channelapproach with appropriate LEGO power management, to enable and supportthe minimum-power solution for the network when either power or capacityconstraints determine this is preferable.

The fourth preference is that the network adds pseudorandom modulationto the symbols after encoding. This is to eliminate the need to increasethe signaling overhead by runs of correlated symbols, as it aids in thereceive adaptation algorithms, provides discrete link encryption,thereby greatly increasing both channel and network security, andenables pilot-gated fast acquisition and timing recovery algorithms. Anextension to the pseudorandom modulation is the analysis and eliminationof certain detectable features by the network in one alternateembodiment. A distinct extension is the embedding of invariance forexploiting broader modulation, using gated SCORE. And a third extensioncombines the two extensions just described.

The fifth preference is the addition of an error detection syndrome, orCRC block to transmissions to detect bit errors, which would enable theinitiation of a retransmission request at the end of a packet'sreception when an error is signaled.

The sixth preference is using a computationally efficient andfast-converging receive weight algorithm (CE&FC RWA) to reduce thecomputational and hardware overhead for each channel's transmission andnode. Variations of such CE&FC RWA that would be used include any one,subcombination, or combination, of the following: Least-Squares Like(LS), which are also known as matrix-inversion; Block-Updateimplementations (on a per-packet basis) that amortize matrix operationsover multiple data snapshots (using tones and/or multitone symbols); andrecursive single-snapshot algorithms. Furthermore, the preferredembodiment may use one, more than one, or all of the following for thesame purposes; calculation of autocorrelation statistics in voltagedomain (e.g. using QRD. MGSO) to minimize the complexity and increasethe accuracy of the weight-update operation; multiport adaptation(simultaneous processing of multiple co-channel links) on each frequencychannel to amortize autocorrelation operations over multiple users (moreat BS than SU nodes); or single-step, single-port adaptations (more atSUs than BSs). Depending on the network constancy and dynamic state, orstatic constancy, the network may vary between uncalibrated techniqueswhich are not dependent upon knowledge or calculation of channelinformation (e.g. the emitter location, or the elevation/azimuthseparating transmitter and receiver), non-blind and blind weightadaptation techniques such as pilot-based initial weight acquisitionsignaling, blind and/or pilot-aided decision-direction weighting inpersistent links, and blind embedded-invariance techniques such as gatedSCORE, in an alternative embodiment. For pilot-aided and gated SCOREtechniques the network would preferentially use the computationallyefficient mechanization of cross-correlation operations employing fasttransform (and in a specific embodiment, FFT) methods. In yet otheralternative embodiments the network may use combined channel sounding,channel-based weight estimation, or any combination of the foregoing.

The seventh preference is using post-combining in-channel toneequalization to remove timing and carrier offset. This could includemultiplication by constant modulus weights, as the first preference, toremove timing and/or delay offsets; alternatively, it could includelow-complexity intertone filtering to remove carrier offset and Dopplererrors: and, of course, a combination of both could be employeddepending on the environmental and hardware complexity needs,constraints, and costs.

The eighth, and most important preference for the preferred embodimentis that each node of the network be capable of employing and employretrodirective transmission and reception modulation, wherein thetransmit gains are set proportional to the actually experiencedreception weights for the frequencies used. For single frequency links,this exploits their potential reciprocity (especially for TDD or ad-hocnetworks). When a TDD approach is used each data frame is encapsulatedin smaller guard frames, and the entire transmission occupies a smallerportion of the available bandwidth to similarly encapsulate it in theavailable bandwidth. The signal for a one-way frame duration is furtherbroken down to incorporate a guard time, a data symbol, an encapsulatingcyclic prefix, a control symbol, a cyclic prefix separation the controlsymbol from the acquisition symbol, and a final encapsulating cyclicprefix. The frequency channels that occupy the bandwidth carry bearerdata fragments over fractional subfragments. One embodiment forlow-mobility, fixed or portable TDD uses a 120B Bearer Data Fragmentwhich is comprised of eight 15B subfragments, 8 differentiating andcoordinating multitone symbols, and of 5.75 MHz available only 4.26 MHzbandwidth, said bandwidth being divided into 13 frequency channels, eachwith 320 kHz, to provide 2 fragments per frame per link, or 6.24 Mbyteseach frame, or 4.608 Mbps as one channel (Channel 0) is reserved forfragment resends, thereby providing the equivalent in wirelesstransmission of 3 land-based T1 lines with, thanks to the reservationand resend provision, a 10⁻⁴ BER, This embodiment further uses for each15B subfragment a MAC header providing 2B CRC and 13B MAC data,providing 52 MAC channels and at full duplex 10.4 kbps per channel. Theacquisition symbols have 30B pilot or synchronization data per 320 kHzfrequency channel, 32 to 64 pilot tones per channel, and thereby providefast acquisition for up to 32 Degrees of Freedom; and if the area issparsely populated or for other reasons (downtime, occupied by othertransmissions) less than 17 Degrees of Freedom were needed, the excessDOF could be reused and reprovisioned to enable dynamic channels andthereby further increase the local flexibility.

The high-mobility TDD link replaces the cyclic prefixes with nulls onthe uplink and CP on the downlink, halves the number of tones anddoubles the separation of tones (from 426 to 213 tones, from 10 kHz to20 kHz separation), and provides half the DOF, but doubles the amount ofoverlap that can be tolerated for the same QOS.

In the preferred embodiment for fixed, portable, and low-mobility links,the tone layout divides the 4.26 MHz into 426 ‘bins’, each of 10 kHzseparation; these are then shared such that thirteen channels, each with32 tones covering 320 kHz, from Channel 0 to Channel 12 are formed, witheach channel further carrying of the 32 tones anetwork-information-bearing tone at the bottom and top of the channel(T0 and T31) that encapsulate the content-carrying tones T1 through T30.Each channel is modulated by a 32-tone pilot to facilitate theacquisition and fine time synchronization. The 10 kHz tone separationcontrols reasonable levels of time selective Multipath (+/−100 MHz),with a cyclic buffer being added at channel edges. The network can,should environmental or network conditions suggest, ‘step down’ theoverall frequency spread to 160 kHz BW without affecting the fundamentalstability of the traffic algorithms or network. (See FIG. 26)

However, for high-mobility TDD links the number of bins, pilot size, andinformation-bearing tones per channel are halved, while the toneseparation is doubled. This will permit high levels of Doppler shift(+/−5 kHz) without sacrificing QoS or content integrity: and again, thenetwork can step down the overall frequency spread and thus thebandwidth per bin can be halved (from 320 kHz to 160 kHz) withoutaffecting the fundamental stability of the traffic algorithms ornetwork, (See FIG. 27)

Preferentially transmit gains are set proportionally to the conjugate ofthe receive weights for that particular node and channel. An alternativeapproach uses channel-based retrodirective transmit gains (more for SUthan BS); a second alternative uses channel-based directive(beam-pointing) transmit gains (more for BS than SU): a third appliesretrodirection to in-channel preemphasis gains; and any combination ofthese alternative approaches may be employed. For any suchsingle-frequency link the transmitting node breaks periodically (in oneparticular alternative embodiment every 5 msec) to collect ACKs, NACKs,or RTSs, that is, to monitor the link performance as perceived by thereceiving node. This approach, though it provides all the capacity in aparticular link to a user as needed, is very compatible with small,stationary networks but less compatible with LEGO network management dueto the effects of nonstationary network fields.

The ninth preference is that the network employs Locally-Enabled NetworkOptimization (LEGO) to manage the transmit power for each node (BS andSU) operating, dynamically. This requires that relatively complexcomputational operations (e.g. receive weight and transmit gaincalculations, multitone, QAM, TCM, and the above-mentionedsignal/symbol/weight/frequency calculations) be carried out autonomouslyat each node in the network, rather than limited to one class of nodes.This further requires that as part of the network overhead simple,network-level control parameters be passed to, or shared by (for certaintime intervals, though such may either be hard-set invariances in thehardware, subject to change signal, or network-alterable) all nodes inthe network. Additionally, each node would implement itspower-management algorithm to minimize transmit power and manage itslinks, thereby indirectly optimizing performance over the entirenetwork. An alternative embodiment would effect network-leveloptimization; and a third would combine node-driven local determinedoptimization with network-level optimization.

Although the preferred embodiment uses an algorithm that presumes thatpower capacity will vary over the network, and that establishes localmaxima by favoring capacity maximization for the power constraint ateach particular node in the network (i.e. a goal driven minimizationalgorithm), various alternative LEGO algorithms could be employed. Forexample, if power shortfalls or constraints on any part of the networkare anticipated, then a capacity maximization subject to that powerconstraint algorithm could be used. A third alternative, presuming thatthe network capacity (as opposed to the power) is the guidingconstraint, sets the power minimization subject to the capacityattainment to the limit possible over the entire network. And a fourth,which is better, sets the power minimization at each particular node inthe network subject to the capacity constraint at that particular node.

The preferred embodiment incorporates into each node a multitone QAMdecoder, with a soft-optimized, Viterbi algorithm (SOVA) embodied in thedecoder, such that the network can effect changes in the decoder at itsnodes by a software or information transmission that re-sets thehardware (EEPROM, FPGA, PAL, or other semiconductor chip) and softwareat that node for the new decoding scheme. An alternative embodiment withlesser cost and complexity at each node, but lesser flexibility, is touse hard-optimized, Viterbi or Reed-Solomon, decoders at each node inthe network. A third alternative is to combine both SOVA and HOVAdecoders in the network and establish hierarchies wherein the moreflexible stations moderate as needed to communicate with their lessflexible but simple contacts.

The preferred embodiment of the present form of the invention alsoincorporates synchronization means for its communications, whichencompass timing estimation, carrier estimation, and synchronizationoperations as part of the network communication and controlmethodologies. The preferred synchronization is to a single, universal,and commonly observable timing signal such as that used in GPSoperations, and occurs as part of the carrier signal (also known as ‘GPSSync’). An alternative embodiment would use synchronization to a timing,carrier, or mutual offset which would be observed at the transmission ormaster node during the reception process, wherein the slaved receiversynchronization would introduce a ×2 delay and carrier error at theslaved transmitter, to avoid interference with the master transmission.Another alternative embodiment would use precompensation (in timing,carrier advancement, or both), to equalize any timing or carrier offsetobserved at both ends of the link (a means to synchronize the slavednode's transmission). Combinations of universal, offset, orprecompensation synchronization methods would be yet further alternativeembodiments.

Synchronization would be performed by including in the transmissiondedicated multitone signals (such forming part of the net of QAM symbolsused by the preferred embodiment), or by using dedicated tones in eachmultitone symbol, or most preferentially, by combinations of dedicatedtones and slots to maximize the synchronization possible for the minimaltransmission density. Coarse synchronization would be performed prior tothe multitone demodulation, using the envelope features of the waveform.Fine synchronization would be performed after multitone demodulation,using dedicated QAM synchronization symbols and tones. For embodimentsusing universal observed timing through GPS synchronization, or usingslaved transmission synchronization, these would be performed usingcontrol or MAC channels. An alternative embodiment would bypass thesynchronization operation entirely by using GPS-based timing and carrieracquisition methods. A separate alternative embodiment would use blind,data-based synchronization methods, minimizing the use of specificsynchronization data.

In the preferred embodiment Transmit/Receive (T/R) compensation meansare employed to remove nonreciprocal channels after shared transmit orreceive operations. These would be employed intermittently on an‘as-needed’ basis through transmission of specialized T/R compensationpackets to initiate the compensation processing. An alternativeembodiment would use dedicated T/R compensation channels to initiate thecompensation processing. And the network would employ loops back of thereceived signal data to provide the initial transmitter with the T/Rchannel differences.

The preferred embodiment further includes methods for datagram networkinstantiations, particularly applicable for conditions such as edgenetworks (e.g. where the wireless electromagnetic communications networkis connecting to the Internet) and entirely interior networks (e.g. the‘backhaul’, dedicated, data-heavy, and often fiber-optic networks ofother carriers). These enable the transmission of data in discretedatagrams, or fragments of datagrams, over multiple routes, such asneighboring nodes, according to the availability of transmission channelcapacities. The recipient nodes would then reconstitute the originaldata stream from the received and re-ordered datagrams or datagramfragments. The preferred embodiment mechanizes the process byincorporating, or enabling, both TCP/IP and FTP protocols, and furtheruses fragment-level CRC's, error detection, and retransmission protocolsto provide Zero-error, Uncommitted Bit-Rate (ZE-UBR) services. By usingreservation protocols such as VoIP RSVP common to the industry, thepreferred embodiment can also provide Committed Bit-Rate (CBR) service.

The preferred embodiment also incorporates means for resolvingscheduling and capacity problems, preferentially the soft-contention andDemand-Assigned, Multiple-Access (DAMA) scheduling means. These wouldprimarily be employed at network edges, though they also can serve at‘bursty’ edge networks or handle ‘unconcentrated’ data streams. The softcontention means minimize the effects of data collisions and the latencydue to retransmissions and/or backoff network effects; the DAMAscheduling is principally employed over longer sessions to maximize thenetwork efficiency.

The topology of the wireless electromagnetic communications networkaffects the local details of implementation of the preferred embodiment,as different constraints and needs dictate how the best adaptationoccurs. For small network embodiments where most, if not all of thenodes are in a common field of view, it is not important whether thenetwork be in a star, ring, bus, or mesh topology. Under theseconditions the preferred embodiment matches each transceiver's Degreesof Freedom (DOF) to the nodes in the possible link directions andequalizes them to provide node-equivalent uplink and downlink capacity.An alternative embodiment may also be used, depending on network trafficor user payment/preferences, wherein asymmetric transceiver assignmentsreflect the desired capacity weighting. After the DOF matching iscompleted, each node adapts the Receive Weights to form a hard(max-SINR, null-steered) or soft (max SINR) solution for multipathresolution for transmissions to that node. Then explicit interferencewhitening for in-network nodes, or implicit data whitening for softnulling of out-of-network interferers are employed for conditions, e.g.as in Part 15 applications. Finally, retrodirective transmit gains(whitened or unwhitened as above) are used during subsequenttransmission operations during a channel communication. In analternative embodiments, the Receive Weights are directive, whitened,channel-based, or a combination thereof.

For large network embodiments the fundamental conditions are differentand thus a different implementation and adaptation strategy is usuallyrequired. These include mesh extensions of star, ring, and bus networks(see FIG. 4); and the principal difference is that most nodes are not ina common field of view. A greater amount of network ‘passing over’ isrequired and nodes must more often serve as intermediary rather thanterminal transceivers. Under these conditions, for each node thetransceiver DOF is matched to those nodes that are observable during theReceive operation, and then performs the symmetric equalization (oralternative, asymmetric equalization) and other operations (andalternatives) as described in the preceding paragraph, Under theseconditions the LEGO parameters used for management of the network aredisseminated throughout the network.

A third possible topology and concomitant operating conditions occurswhen the network is cellular, or has overlapping subordinate orcoordinating networks. Under these conditions, which are particularlylikely to occur under competition, not all the nodes will be connectedto the same wireless electromagnetic communications network. A greaterpotential for signal interference which is beyond the network's controlresults and the preferred embodiment adapts to this constraint.Furthermore, there may be some minimal transmissions of control, networkhealth, or network OAMP data through a disparate infrastructure (wiredor wireless), or even a high-rate connection through a wiredinfrastructure in an alternative embodiment.

When these conditions occur and networks are in view of each other, theycan experience signal or physical overlapping; in many situations, suchas urban areas, there may be heavy interpenetration. In principle therewill be physical separation of the disparate networks' nodes, at leastas to their geographic identity (two mobile phones generally do notshare the exact, same physical location and continue to work when socrushed together); in practice, however, all the networks' nodes sharethe same physical layer of the electromagnetic spectrum and the realworld geography and hardware. What ensures the continued separation ofthe networks is and enforced separation at the non-physical, informationand communication layer. Alternative embodiments may allow low-ratecommunication, or means for limited, or even allowable fullinter-network communication, depending on the differing networks'contract agreement as to communications and provisioning sharing.

Under these conditions the nodes in the preferred embodiment directnulls (hard or soft) at all observed Transmission nodes in othernetworks, to minimize the interference from and with the other network'ssignals. This same approach may be used, in an alternative embodiment,to enforce a lock ‘out’ of unauthorized nodes in a secure network. Thenulls are further enabled using network-wide scrambling, gating, orencryption means as described elsewhere, to differentiate the twonetworks' internal signals.

An alternative embodiment incorporates one or more broadcast modes fromnetwork master controllers, that would enforce common timing standardsand provide broadcast, i.e. network common information, withoutrequiring two-way bandwidth for such effort.

Advantages: Lego

Among the advantages of the preferred embodiment's solution of the localoptimizations to obtain global optimization are the following: (1) theworking target capacity objective for any given set of nodes may berapidly reached by iterating from an initial approximation to anacceptably-constrained solution with many fewer iterations overall; (2)the power levels that solve the local target capacity objective minimizethe transmitted energy at the local node, thereby minimizing theco-channel interference to other uses in the network; and (3) thequantities needed for the local solution only require local informationto solve, thereby reducing substantially the ratio between ‘control’ and‘content’ information, thus further enhancing the overall capacity ofthe network.

Additional advantages of the preferred embodiment's LEGO approach are(1) that it can be solved at each node using a very simple but powerfulapproximation technique that converges rapidly to the correct solution:(2) the power levels, at each respective node, that solve Eq. 3 actuallyminimize the transmitted energy at each respective node, hence (3)minimizing co-channel interference to other users (nodes) in the networkwhile achieving the targeted capacity rates; and (4) most of thequantities required for the optimization only require local information.

Further advantages of the preferred embodiment include the lack of anyneed for estimating any channel matrices, and substantial lessening ofdetailed and fine calculation and recalculation of both (1) the initialSINR ratios and (2) the effect on each node of changing the power usageof any other node in the network. This latter has a secondary effect ofreducing the amount of ‘control’ information that needs to be sentacross the network, and reduces the amount of work or complexity thathas to be managed by the network controller.

LEGO Effect on the MIMO Network

By solving the optimization at the local level for each node of thenetwork, the problem of network optimization becomes a hierarchical one,where the overall problem is reduced to a series of subproblems. Thepreferred embodiment's implementation as described above, is thengeneralized to handle both the power constrained unconstrained(negligible noise) objective functions.

For the channel capacity value D₂₁, the network performs theoptimization

$\begin{matrix}{{D_{21} = {\max\;\beta\mspace{20mu}{such}\mspace{14mu}{that}}}\mspace{85mu}{{\beta \leq {\sum\limits_{q \in {U{(m)}}}^{\;}\;{\sum\limits_{k}^{\;}\;{\log\;\left( {1 + {\gamma\left( {k,q} \right)}} \right)}}}},\mspace{146mu}{{\gamma\left( {k,q} \right)} \geq 0},\begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{\sum\limits_{m}^{\;}\;{R_{1}(m)}} & {{\leq R},} \\{\pi_{1}\left( {k,q} \right)} & {{\geq 0},} \\{\sum\limits_{q \in {U{(m)}}}^{\;}\;{\sum\limits_{k}^{\;}\;{\pi_{1}\left( {k,q} \right)}}} & {\leq {R_{1}(m)}}\end{matrix} & \;\end{matrix}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 49}\end{matrix}$where U(m) is a collection of links in a given aggregate set m, k is atransmission mode index, reflecting the fact that a single link maytransmit over multiple diversity channels, π₁(k,q) is the transmit powerfor mode k and link q, γ(k,q) is the post beamforming signal tointerference noise ratio, and R₁(m) is the total allowed transmit powerfor aggregate set m; by solving first the reverse link power controlproblem; the treating the forward link problem in an identical fashion,substituting the subscripts 2 for 1. The solution for the link-leveloptimization as described above is then implemented at each node, andthe network solution derived therefrom.

The means used to solve D₂₁ optimization are chosen to minimize theamount of auxiliary channel information, or network control informationthat displaces network content. For most of the max-min objectivefunctions described herein, a necessary condition of optimality is thatall of the links over each link index q achieve the same capacity. Wecan therefore require the constraint in Eq. 49 to be an equality Forthis embodiment, the objective function that is solved at each aggregateset m, becomes;

$\begin{matrix}{{{\min\limits_{\pi_{r}{(q)}}{\sum\limits_{q \in {Q{(m)}}}^{\;}\;{\pi_{r}(q)}}},\mspace{14mu}{{such}\mspace{14mu}{that}}}{\beta = {\sum\limits_{q \in {Q{(m)}}}^{\;}\;{\log\;\left( {1 + {\gamma(q)}} \right)}}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 50}\end{matrix}$The preferred embodiment linearizes this objective function as afunction of γ(q) and optimizes it using the formulation in EQ 28, EQ 29and EQ 30.For each aggregate set m, the network now attempts to achieve the givencapacity objective, β, by (1) optimizing the receive beamformers, usingsimple MMSE processing, to simultaneously optimize the SINR; (2) basedon the individual measured SINR for each q index, attempt toincrementally increase or lower its capacity as needed to match thecurrent target; and (3) step the power by a quantized small step in theappropriate direction. When all aggregate sets have achieved the currenttarget capacity, then the network can either increase the targetcapacity β, or add additional users (opportunistically or by signal) toexploit the now-known excess capacity. The network controller of thepreferred embodiment is computationally extremely simple and requires avery small feedback channel, or portion of the control channel otherwiseunused, to accomplish its tasks.

As the network evolves each independent channel is assigned a variablerate codec optimized for the currently achieved SINR for that link,whereby a code and associated rate are chosen to achieve the desired biterror using any of the Trellis Codes, interleavers, and/or Reed-Solomoncodes known to the literature.

Good network performance includes, generally, a measure of uniformminimum performance level for all links assigned the same quality ofservice (QoS). The preferred embodiment uses Max-Min capacity criterionas disclosed above to attain this, as it is generalizable to a widevariety of network configurations. Minimizing the total power subject toarbitrary capacity constraints β(m), as in EQ 3 and EQ 4 is also anembodiment of interest and is easily accommodated by the currentinvention. The addition of reciprocity as a feature of the preferredembodiment allows us to state the decoupled objective function:

$\begin{matrix}{{D_{rt} = {\max\limits_{\pi_{1}{({k,q})}}\;{\min\limits_{m}\;{{D_{rt}(m)}\mspace{14mu}{where}}}}}{{D_{rt}(m)} \equiv {\sum\limits_{q \in {U{(m)}}}^{\;}\;{\sum\limits_{k}^{\;}\;{\log\;\left( {1 + {\gamma\left( {k,q} \right)}} \right)}}}}} & {{EQ}.\mspace{14mu} 51}\end{matrix}$as the largest possible mutual information that can be obtained, as theone to be used to obtain network optimality.

The reciprocity equation, Eq. 2, establishes that the network's uplinkcapacity will equal its downlink capacity provided that the receiveweights are used to transmit and the transmit weights to receive.Implementing the network optimization in this fashion provides thefollowing benefits: (1) transmit weights can be obtained from receiveweights; (2) transmit and receive weights require only local informationat each node, thereby eliminating the ‘network God’ and ‘commonknowledge’ problems; and (3) local optimization done using thisoptimizes the entire network, both making it stable and converging. Thereciprocity equation is used particularly to tell each node how tochoose its transmit weights optimally.

An improvement over blindly substituting transmit and receive weights,however, is in using the proper form of the objective function thatsatisfies the reciprocity equation, for that determines how to optimallyadjust and select the gain over multiple outputs and multiple inputs.The choice of the objective function specified above dictates thealgorithmic procedure that is also specified above to optimize thenetwork.

Alternative embodiments of the network controller include having it setthe entire network target capacity objective (β), using the networkcontroller to add a node, drop a node, or change the target capacityobjective for the nodes it governs or the network. FIG. 41 illustratesone feasible algorithm whereby a new node (or a node which had earlierdropped out of the network) enters the network. Further embodimentsinclude using a network control element that may, either in addition toor in replacement for altering β, add, drop, or change channels betweennodes, frequencies, coding, security, or protocols, polarizations, ortraffic density allocations usable by a particular node or channel. Inyet another embodiment the network control element selects and managesdiffering constraints, not being limited just to power and capacity, butalso QoS, the amount of frequency spread between channels, the multipathdensity allocated to any particular pairing of nodes, or to anyparticular user, or any combination and subcombination of all of theabove.

Although the present invention has been described chiefly in terms ofthe presently preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that thedisclosure is not to be interpreted as limiting. Various alterations andmodifications will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the artafter having read the above disclosure. Such modifications may involveother features which are already known in the design, manufacture anduse of wireless electromagnetic communications networks, systems andMIMO networks and systems therefore, and which may be used instead of orin addition to features already described herein. The algorithms andequations herein are not limiting but instructive of the embodiment ofthe invention, and variations which are readily derived throughprogramming or mathematical transformations which are standard or knownto the appropriate art are not excluded by omission. Accordingly, it isintended that the appended claims are interpreted as covering allalterations and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scopeof the invention in light of the prior art.

Additionally, although claims have been formulated in this applicationto particular combinations of elements, it should be understood that thescope of the disclosure of the present application also includes anysingle novel element or any novel combination of elements disclosedherein, either explicitly or implicitly, whether or not it relates tothe same invention as presently claimed in any claim and whether or notit mitigates any or all of the same technical problems as does thepresent invention. The applicants hereby give notice that new claims maybe formulated to such features and/or combinations of such featuresduring the prosecution of the present application or of any furtherapplication derived therefrom.

FIG. 42 depicts the baseline transceiver employed in the primaryembodiment. The radio consists of a pair of antennas and RF transceivers(frequency up/down converters and PA's); a digital ASIC, FPGA, orsoftware radio component to implement lower-PHY (LPHY) symbolmodulation/demodulation operations, linear combining of LPHY modemoutput signals during receive operations and corresponding linearweighting and distribution of LPHY model input signals during transmitoperations; an LO employing a GPS disciplined oscillator (GPS-DO); and asoftware computer to implement optional higher-layer codec andcollaborative radio applications, Typical commercially availableGPS-DO's can provide <100 ns relative node-to-node timing error (wellwithin the 800 ns delay error budget provided by the lower PHYmodulation format) and <1 Hz carrier offset error (separate from Dopplershift between nodes), stable to within 300 ns over periods of >1 hour inevent of GPS outage, e.g., due to foliage or man-made obstructions. InTDD network instantiations, this can allow fast (1.25 ms) node entry tothe network without the need for detailed and distributed timingsynchronization mechanisms. In absence of GPS-DO's collaborative meanscan be implemented to allow the radios to synchronize to a common sharedtime reference by monitoring broadcast signals transmitted from adjacenttransceivers, or to synchronize to GPS time and frequency standards ifjust one of the transceivers in the network possesses a GPS-DO, allowingthe transceivers to be implemented at greatly reduced cost. The baselinetransceiver can to employ two degrees of freedom during receive andsubsequent transmit operations, to set up independent ports to up to twoother transceivers in the network during transmit or receive operations,or to null one external interferer during receive operations. Antennasin the network can be polarization diverse (transmitting and receivingon linearly independent, preferably orthogonal polarizations), spatiallydiverse (deployed at spatially separated locations), or combinations ofpolarization and spatially diverse. It is also possible to have a singlechannel transceiver capable of communicating with the network, or anynumber of ad-hoc combinations of transceivers of varying capabilities,likewise.

FIG. 43 depicts means for extending the baseline transceiver to largernumbers of antenna channels. The baseline transceiver and adaptationalgorithm include provisions for routing of transmit and receive dataand a modified Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization (MGSO) statistics betweenhoards, in order to allow the radio to be scaled up to as many as 8antennas by combining 2, 3, or 4 Transceiver boards together. Atransceiver employing L baseline transceivers can employ up to 2Ldegrees of freedom during receive and subsequent transmit operations, toestablish independent channels to up to 2L separate transceivers in anetwork, or to excise up to 2L−1 external interference during receiveoperations.

FIG. 44 depicts an exemplary MIMO networking routing scenario in whichfour transceivers with four spatial degrees of freedom are used to routedata around a four-node network in the presence of a strong jammer. Eachtransceiver employs two of its four available degrees of freedom toestablish connections with its neighboring transceivers. The remainingdegrees of freedom are then used to excise the jammer in the center ofthe network, and to increase signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in thedirection of its neighboring transceivers. In a time-division duplex(TDD) communication network, these connections can be used tosimultaneously route data in clockwise and counter-clockwise directionsto form a counter rotating ring network. In lightly loaded networks,this can double the capacity available to any node in the network;moreover, this can greatly increase availability of the network to eachnode, by providing a redundant path for transmission of data betweennetwork ports.

FIG. 45 depicts the baseline symbol and timing structure allowingtransceivers to connect with each other in a symmetric time-divisionduplex (TDD) multinode network. Packets are transmitted to and fromuplink receive nodes and downlink receive nodes during alternating timeslots, with an appropriate guard time, e.g., for switching betweentransmit and receive modes, transmission of signaling/control andnetwork maintenance/provision packets, computation of receiver CRC's anddecoding algorithms, and operation of higher-layer data routingprocedures. Within each slot, an integer number of lower PHY (LPHY)symbols is transmitted. The number of symbols is chosen to have a valuethat allows implementation of efficient orthogonal transformations overthe symbol time index. In the primary embodiment, this number is setequal to a power-of-two, e.g., 256 symbols, in order to use of fastHadamard transform (FHT) operations; however, other embodiments canemploy different numbers of symbols, e.g., allowing implementation ofmixed-radix fast Fourier transforms (FFT's) or other linear orthogonaloperations. Each LPHY symbol is assumed to possess a base symbol and acyclic prefix that is discarded during the LPHY symbol demodulationoperation, allowing the transceivers to be insensitive to delay andmultipath with maximum substantive value that is less than the cyclicprefix. In the preferred embodiment, the cyclic prefix and base symbolis set to 800 ns and 3.2 μs, commensurate with the 802.11 OFDM trafficPHY, and may include additional synchronization and signaling symbols(external to symbols carrying traffic information) in order to maximizecommonality with 802.11 hardware, and/or promote eventual coexistenceand/or integration of the invention into 802.11 networks. In thepreferred embodiment, the LPHY symbol is also either an OFDM waveformcomprising multiple subcarriers (modulated OFDM tones) or a PAM signalequivalent to a single carrier of an OFDM waveform, e.g., for low-rateapplications. However, the invention is compatible with many differentLPHY modulation formats besides OFDM or PAM, including spread spectrummodulation formats that spread the signal over wide bandwidth, andLPI/LPD modulation formats that reduce or eliminate cyclic features ofthe waveform.

FIG. 46 depicts exemplary means for deploying the preferred embodimentin a TDD mesh network topology, in order to transmit data between awidely separated source and destination node. In this embodiment, thenetwork nodes are first separated into uplink transmit nodes (downlinkreceive nodes), depicted with light interiors in FIG. 46, which transmitdata over even time slots and receive data over odd time slots, anduplink receive nodes (downlink transmit nodes), depicted with darkinteriors in FIG. 46, which receive data over even time slots andtransmit data over odd time slots. Each transceiver is assumed topossess sufficient spatial channels to allow it to communicatesimultaneously with at least two of its nearest neighbors over each timeinterval, i.e., to form two links between its nearest neighbors in thenetwork, suppress any network or external interference impinging on thenodes, and close each individual link under channel propagationconditions observed by that node. At high spectral efficiency, e.g., inapplications where the nodes must transmit data at high rate, each node(and especially internal nodes) may require as many as eight antennas,or four baseline transceivers, to support MIMO networking communication.Conversely, in applications where the nodes must transmit data at modestrates, e.g., VoIP communications, each transceiver could operate with asfew as two diversity channels, or a single baseline transceiver, tosupport needs of the network.

Each link is given a unique link address (LA), defined by the transmitnode address (TNA) and receive node address (RNA), i.e., the nodeaddress (NA) of the nodes originating and terminating that link, and thechannel rank of that particular link if a true multirank MIMO linkexists and is exploited by those nodes. In the sixteen-node networkshown in FIG. 46, each LA is defined as a two-hex address comprising the(RNA, TNA) for that link, with a third hex number (equal to zero inevery LA shown in the Figure) reserved to capture the mode index(0=dominant rank) of that link. In FIG. 46, uplinks instantiated overodd time-slots and passing data from uplink transmit nodes to downlinkreceive nodes are depicted as solid arrows, and downlinks instantiatedover even time slots and passing data from downlink transmit nodes todownlink receive nodes are depicted as dashed arrows. In this Figure,packets can be transported across the entire network in 7 time slots(3.5 TDD frames).

FIG. 47 describes the baseline symbol and timing structure for theinvention, when transceivers are operated in an ad-hoc multinodenetwork. In the preferred ad hoc embodiment, traffic data is transmittedover a preset numbers of LPHY symbols, e.g., determined at the beginningof data communications, which is larger than a minimum number of signalsN_(embed) determined by the overhead structure set aside to implementreceive adaptation algorithms at each transceiver, and which is aconvenient number, e.g., power-of-two, allowing implementation ofefficient data transformations in subsequent processing steps. However,the preferred ad hoc embodiment employs an overhead structure thatallows implementation of alternate methods that do not require exactknowledge of the full packet length to implement receive adaptationalgorithms, and that can allow transmission of packets of differentlength to different nodes in the network.

For certain levels of quality-of-service, the traffic packet may befollowed by an acknowledgment packet sent from the receive node(s) backto the transmit node, comprising N_(embed) LPHY symbols. As in the TDDinstantiation, the traffic and acknowledgement packets are separated bya guard time interval; however, the time interval between traffic andacknowledgement packets may be very short, e.g., on the order of theShort interframe Space (SIFS) in 802.11 communications.

FIG. 48 depicts exemplary means for deploying the invention in an ad hocmesh network topology. In this network, any node can communicate withany other node in its field of view, allowing the source node tosimultaneously transmit packets to any available node in the network. InFIG. 48, for example, the source node transmits packets to five separateintermediate (relay) receive nodes over a first traffic time slot, anddirects those nodes to transmit packets directly to the destination nodeover a subsequent traffic time slot. In the preferred ad hoc embodiment,each of the relay nodes receive independent data, e.g., one of fivesubsets of data, from the source nodes, similar to the approach employedin the TDD embodiment. However, the invention supports an additionalmacrodiverse mode in which the source node transmits identical trafficdata to each intermediate node. In this case, the intermediate nodeswill form a macrodiverse transmitter that can exploit the full networktransfer Junction between the source node and intermediate nodes duringthe first traffic time slot, and the full network transfer functionbetween the relay nodes and the destination node over the second traffictime slot.

FIG. 49 describes multiport PHY transmit operations performed attransceivers using the invention; and these are described in detailbelow. In order to minimize complexity of the Figure, operations areshown for a single-carrier LPHY modulation format, e.g., a PAM formatemploying a cyclic prefix as shown in FIG. 45 and FIG. 47, or for asingle subcarrier of an OFDM LPHY, In the latter case, all operationsare replicated across subcarriers, with possible exception ofsubcarriers that may be reserved for synchronization purposes or forcompatibility with existing wireless air interfaces, e.g., 802.11ag, andadditional variations that may be introduced to increase security of thenetwork.

On the traffic path, data bits intended for each of M_(port) receivenode are first encoded into N_(data) complex traffic data symbols, e.g.,complex QPSK or QAM symbols, using conventional encoder technology.These symbols are then multiplexed onto the upper N_(data) input bins ofan efficient orthogonal transform operator such as a fast Hadamardtransform (FHT), such that at least N_(embed) bins of the transformationare not modulated by data during the subsequent transform operation. Onthe overhead or “pilot” path, at least one of N_(embed) bins ismodulated. This bin location is chosen based on the node address of thetransmit node, and a network-wide (e.g., time-of-day based) TransmissionSecurity (TRANSEC) operation known to each node in the network, e.g., bymodulo-N_(embed) adding the TNA to a common TRANSEC word, such that eachnode is modulating a unique bin during any given traffic oracknowledgement time slot. Each port of modulated traffic and pilotsymbols are then passed through the fast orthogonal transformation,yielding N_(FHT) transformed output symbols. Each port of transformedoutput symbols are then multiplied by a second, pseudorandom constantmodulus TRANSEC receive code based on the node address of the receivenode that the transmit node is attempting to communicate with over thatport and time slot, and other information known only to the networkusers. The resultant symbols are then multiplied by the M_(port)×M_(ant)transmit diversity weights employed at the transmitter, where M_(ant) isthe number of antennas employed at the transmitter. If those weights aredetermined adaptively, e.g., using knowledge of reciprocity of thecommunication channel, this data is further multiplied by a set oftransmit-receive compensation weights that enforce reciprocity betweenthe transmit and receive channels at the node. These symbols are thenpassed through the LPHY symbol modulator (in combination with symbolscorresponding to other subcarriers if the transceiver employs an OFDMLPHY), and onto the subsequent DAC, upconversion, power amplification,and RF transmission operations.

FIG. 50 describes multiport PHY receive operations performed attransceivers using the invention; and these are described in detailbelow. In order to minimize complexity of the Figure, operations areshown for a single-carrier LPHY modulation format, e.g., a PAM formatemploying a cyclic prefix as shown in FIG. 45 and FIG. 47, or for asingle subcarrier of an OFDM LPHY. In the latter case, all operationsare replicated across subcarriers, with possible exception ofsubcarriers that may be reserved for synchronization purposes or forcompatibility with existing wireless air interfaces, e.g., 802.11ag, andadditional variations that may be introduced to increase security of thenetwork.

After RF reception, downconversion, and ADC operations on M_(ant)spatial or polarization diverse antennas, data received at each antennais passed through an LPHY demodulator that converts that data toN_(FHT)×M_(ant) complex matrix representation (M_(ant) columns ofN_(FHT)×1 complex data), on each subcarrier if the transceiver isemploying an OFDM LPHY. Each N_(FHT)×1 complex data vector is thenmultiplied by the conjugate of the TRANSEC receive code for that node,which removes that TRANSEC receive code added at the transmitter forthat port (and only for ports that were intended to pass data to thatreceive node). This data is then passed through the inverse of theorthogonal transformation employed at the transmitter, e.g., an inverseFHT, and separated into the lower N_(embed) output bins (anN_(embed)×M_(ant) complex pilot data matrix) corresponding to the pilotsignal(s) employed at each transmit node attempting to communicate withthat receive node, and N_(data) output bins (an N_(data)×M_(ant) complextraffic data matrix) corresponding to the traffic data transmitted tothe receive node, as well as interference generated by other nodes inthe network or external emitters.

On the pilot path, the N_(embed)×M_(ant) complex pilot data matrix isthen passed to an adaptation algorithm that detects bins modulated bythe transmitters attempting to communicate with the receiver; identifiesthose transmitters based on the detected bins and the TRANSEC transmitcode algorithm employed in the network, determines quality of thereceived pilot symbols and (by extension) traffic data, and developscombining weights that can extract the traffic data from theN_(data)×M_(ant) complex traffic data matrix at the maximumsignal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (max-SINR) achievable by thetransceiver. On the training path, these combiner weights are thenapplied to the traffic data matrix, and the extracted data is thenpassed to a traffic decoder that decodes the traffic data back into bitsand performs additional operations employed by the communication link,e.g., bit-level data decryption and error detection operations.

In the preferred TDD and ad hoc embodiments, each transmitter uses anorthogonal transformation of the same length during its transmitoperation, generating packets of the same time duration as well.However, in some alternate embodiments different transmitters maytransmit signals with different numbers of traffic data symbols. In thiscase, if an appropriate orthogonal transformation is employed at thetransmitters, e.g., a radix-2 FHT, and the pilot symbols are restrictedto an appropriate subset of input bins in that transformation, e.g., thefirst N_(embed)=2^(p) bins of an FHT, then the first N_(embed) symbols(or a multiple of the first N_(embed) symbols) can be used in thereceive adaptation algorithm. This can allow the invention to be used infully adhoc networks where nodes can transmit packets of arbitrarylength. However, receive combiner weights obtained through this processmay exhibit misadjustment relative to optimal weights for the trafficdata, as the pilot symbols may not experience the full processing gainof the FHT.

FIG. 51 describes multiport PHY receive adaptation operations performedin the primary embodiment of the invention; and these are described indetail below. On each subcarrier, the N_(embed)×M_(ant) complex pilotdata matrix is first passed to a whitening operation such as a modifiedGram-Schmidt orthogonalization (MGSO) or other QR decomposition (QRD)that separates the pilot data X into an N_(embed)×M_(ant) whitened dataset satisfying Q^(H)Q=I, and an M_(ant)×M_(ant) statistic vector R thatcaptures the autocorrelation of X, e.g., the Cholesky decomposition ofX^(H)X. The Q matrix is then analyzed (across multiple subcarriers forOFDM LPHY's) to detect all of the modulated pilot bins. This informationis used to unambiguously determine the TNA of each node attempting tocommunicate with the receiver. Once this determination has been made,the link SINR, whitened linear combiner weights, and subsequentunwhitened combiner weights are computed for each transmitted signal(and subcarrier for OFDM LPHY's).

FIG. 52 describes receive packet detection, address association, andlink SINR estimation performed in the primary embodiment of theinvention; and these are described in detail below. The adaptationalgorithms are uncalibrated, i.e., they do not exploit knowledge of theshaping, polarization, or physical placement of antennas used by thetransceiver, and can be used to instantiate arbitrary networktopologies, including point-to-point links, star networks, ringnetworks, or full mesh networks. When deployed in point-to-point links,successive iterations of the transmit and receive adaptation algorithmcauses each transceiver to adapt its multiport combiner and distributionweights to the eigenmodes (left and right eigenvectors) of their MIMOinternode channel response, typically in 2-to-4 TDD frames (5-10 ms).The resultant fully adaptive link can approach the Shannon capacity ofthe MIMO communication channel, regardless of the rank or distributionof the eigenvalues of that channel.

FIG. 53 describes transmit adaptation algorithms performed in theprimary embodiment of the invention. The baseline system employsnetwork-wide collaborative link optimization rules referred to in [2] aslocally enabled global optimization (LEGO), which optimize network-widemeasures of network quality using retrodirective transmit weightadaptation and local (link layer) power management instructions. Theapproach exploits the ability to form nulls during transmit operationsto intelligently manage interference presented to other nodestransmitting or communicating in the same frequency channel. Thisincludes other nodes operating on the same network, and nodes operatingon disconnected networks, without the need for higher-layercross-communication between interference nodes or networks.

Also described below is also describe an alternate embodiment in whichthe adaptive receive combining weights are adapted to completelyseparate intended links with maximum signal-to-interference ratio ratherthan SIR, i.e., to direct “hard nulls” at each transmitter attempting tocommunicate with the node during the receive time slot so that interlinkinterference is completely removed during the receive operation, and todirect corresponding hard nulls back at the intended links duringsubsequent transmission opportunities. Although this algorithm doesintroduce some misadjustment (particularly during receive operations),it can improve the stability of the LEGO transmit adaptation algorithmsin highly dynamic communication networks.

The resultant fully-adaptive system provides a much more versatilesolution than competing multilayer receive-adaptive techniques such asBLAST and STP, which only approaches the Shannon capacity in full-rank(i.e., high multipath) channels. In particular, the fully-adaptivesystem can use its diversity degrees of freedom (DoF's) to providesubstantive transmit gain in low-rank channels found in airborne andrural conditions. The fully-adaptive system can also use these DoF's toexcise interference impinging on either end of the link due to othernodes operating in the same frequency band, hostile jamming of the link.In addition, the fully adaptive system provides an automatic powercontrol mechanism (LEGO Algorithm) that can be used to maximize capacity(high throughput applications) or minimize transmit power (LPDapplications), depending on the requirements of the system at any pointduring a mission. These attributes greatly increase the flexibility,range of operation, and application of the approach.

Moreover, the weight adaptation procedure is decoupled from operationsused to encode data onto each transmitter port (channel eigenmode) anddecode data taken from the corresponding receive port at the other sideof the link, without expensive multilayer decoding, encoding, andcancellation procedures employed in receive-adaptive methods. Thisgreatly reduces the complexity and reaction time of the transceiver, byallowing the transmit/receive weights to quickly adjust to highlydynamic environments encountered in military use scenarios.

The fully adaptive point-to-point link seamlessly extends tocollaborative multimode networks. In particular, each transceiveremploys the same multiport linear processor structure to formsimultaneous links to multiple neighbors in multinode networks. Theresultant MIMO networking strategy (first disclosed in [1]) exploits theadditional inherent route diversity of star, ring, or mesh networks, toprovide the benefits of MIMO processing in a network setting.

The MIMO network illustrated in FIG. 44 displays a minimalist-model,four-node, network that is operating in the presence of a jammer. Inthis figure, nodes employ the multiport linear receive and transmitoperations discussed above, to establish multiple simultaneous linkswith their neighbors. In the presence of point-to-point link diversity(high-rank MIMO channel response between communicators), e.g.,polarization or multipath diversity, nodes may establish multipleconnections between their neighbors. In the absence of such linkdiversity, or if desired by the network, the nodes may alternatelyestablish simultaneous connections with their neighbors. Theseconnections can be used to directly source data to these neighbors, ortransmit data through these neighbors to more distant destination nodes.In the example shown in FIG. 46, this strategy doubles the amount ofdata transportable to or from any node in the network—even if no linkdiversity exists on any of the internode channels (rank-1 internodechannel response). More generally, this strategy allows the capacity ofeach node to grow linearly with the number of antennas at that node,even in nondiverse communication scenarios such as airborne systems,desert combat scenarios, and ship-to-ship/shore naval communicationnetworks, while maintaining the ability to provide superlinearthroughput increases at low power levels. Moreover, this strategy allowsunused DoFs to be used for other purposes, including excision of strongjamming likely to be encountered in battlefield conditions.

The symbol and timing structure for the baseline Phase 1 Lower-PHY(LPHY) is illustrated in FIG. 45. In order to simplify the Phase I lowerPHY and requisite RF transceiver hardware, the method and system canemploy a linear PAM LPHY with a 250 kHz symbol rate (4 μs lower PHYsymbol period). In FIG. 45, the PAM symbol shape is assumed to be a 4 μsrectangle comprising a 3.2 .mu.s base pulse, used during demodulationoperations, and an 800 ns cyclic prefix that is discarded duringdemodulation operations. The resulting LPHY modem can be consequently bemodeled as a single subcarrier of an 802.11g-like OFDM symbol, allowingthe radio to be easily scaled to much wider bandwidths in later programphases. In addition, many other linear-PAM LPHY's are also consistent,including spread spectrum modulation formats that spread the signal overwide bandwidth, and LPI/LPD modulation formats that reduce or eliminatecyclic features of the waveform. The nominal ADC and DAC rates for thetransceivers can be 5 Msps, well within the capability of low SWaP/costsystems.

The multiport PHY transmit/receive operations are illustrated in FIG.47. At the transmitter, a frame of data intended for each transmit portis encoded to QAM using forward error correcting (FEC) encoding,organized into blocks of 240 QAM symbols, multiplexed with a transmitpilot that is unique to each node or transmit node address (TNA) in thenetwork, and spread over the frame and PHY subcarriers using a fastHadamard transform (FHT). The transmit pilot is designed to allowimplementation of computationally efficient adaptive detection andreception algorithms at the intended receiver(s) in the network, withoutthe need for prior knowledge of that pilot at the receiver. SixteenHadamard bins (software provisionable at each node based on the numberof antennas employed by that node) set aside for pilot transmission addonly 6.25% (16/256) overhead to the communications network, allowingeffective node detection, receive adaptation, and node data extractionin one TDD slot (1.25 ms), with as many as eight antennas pertransceiver. However, the number of pilot bins can be easily modified insoftware, or even provisioned on a dynamic basis, e.g., to improve theperformance of receive adaptation algorithms when more complextransceivers enter the network, or to increase link throughput as thoseradios leave the environment.

After the FHT, the combined information and transmit pilot are modulatedby a pseudorandom receive TRANSEC pilot, unique to the intended receiveror receive node address (RNA) in the network. If needed, the TRANSECpilot is also frequency compensated to remove Doppler shift anticipatedat the intended receiver, allowing the link to operate effectivelyvelocities much higher than those anticipated in the Phase I demo. TheTRANSEC output data is then passed through a linear distribution network(transmit beamformer) that can place beams in the direction of up toM_(ANT), targeted receive nodes for a transceiver with M_(ANT) transmitantennas. Alternately, the transmit beamformer can place up to 20log₁₀(M_(ANT)) energy in the direction of a single targeted receivenode, allowing effective data transfer at a much lower power andconsequent intercept footprint.

At the receiver, the processor strips off the receive TRANSEC pilot,simultaneously scrambling signals from any unauthorized user, andrevealing the unique transmit pilots from each authorized userattempting to contact the receiver during that receive frame. Theresultant data is passed to a computationally efficient, ModifiedGraham-Schmidt Orthogonalization (MGOS) based joint detection and signalextraction processor, which simultaneously detects each authorized pilotin the environment, and develops multiport receive combiner weights thatexcise interference in the communication channel (includingself-interference from other authorized users). These weights aredewhitened and applied to the information-bearing signal after theinverse FHT (IFHT), and used to adapt retrodirective distributionweights used during subsequent transmit operations. The combined receiveTRANSEC and IFHT spreading operations guarantees that the receivealgorithm will apply equal interference rejection to the pilot and datasymbols, for any interferer impinging on a node during its receive timeslot.

The baseline system employs network-wide collaborative link optimizationrules referred to as locally enabled global optimization (LEGO), whichoptimize network-wide measures of network quality using retrodirectivetransmit weight adaptation and local (link layer) power managementinstructions. The approach exploits the ability to form nulls duringtransmit operations to intelligently manage interference presented toother nodes transmitting or communicating in the same frequency channel.This includes other nodes operating on the same network, and nodesoperating on disconnected networks, without the need for higher-layercross-communication between interference nodes or networks. Thiscapability, originally developed for optimization of point-to-multipointcellular networks in wireless local-loop (AT&T Wireless Project Angel)and wireless metropolitan area networks (IEEE 802.16), cannot beemployed in systems that do not perform transmit adaptation. This methodand system can extend the LEGO approach to game theoretic methods thatmay perform this network optimization over a wider range ofapplications, networks, and optimization criteria.

The complexity of the method and system are shown in FIGS. 49-53, Systemcomplexity can be divided into two components: an FPGA corewarecomponent, comprising regular operations that are easily implementedusing field-programmable gate arrays or ASIC's, and a DSP softwarecomponent. FPGA coreware operations can include the lower PHY modem,transmit and receive beamforming (linear distribution and combiningoperations), transmit/receive TRANSEC operations, and FHT/IFHToperations. The DSP software operations can include the MGSO operation,node discovery, and weight dewhitening operation. In both such cases,complexity is calculated in DSP clock cycles per second, for ahypothetical DSP hardware element that can compute a simultaneous realadd and a real multiply in 4/3 clock cycle (1 clock cycle with 33%derating for memory transfer operations). Complexity is further dividedby the number of transceiver ports (simultaneous transmit and receivechannels), to provide a measure of the DSP cost of each link usedaccessed by the transceiver.

The overall complexity of the DSP component of transceiver operations(adaptive algorithm) is less than 200 kcps for the phase 1 system, orwell within the capabilities of a low-cost DSP components. Similarly,the overall complexity of the FPGA component of transceiver operationsis less than 30 Mcps, which easily fits on the commercially availableFPGA and in fact can be implemented using moderate cost DSP components.

Assuming low power rate-1 BPSK QAM encoding on each link, the resultantsystem can provide a PHY throughput (data rate into the MAC layer) of 96kbps (192 kbps full duplex), or establish 12 simultaneous 48 kbpsfull-duplex data links (576 kbps network transfer rate) between eachnode-pair in a four-node ring network, using a single two-channeltransceiver at each node in that network and a simple 250 ksps PAM lowerPHY. Assuming an active bandwidth of 250 kHz, this corresponds to aspectral network efficiency of over 2 bps/Hz. This efficiency andbandwidth scales linearly with the number bits/symbol employed in theQAM encoding operation. Because the ring network establishes acounterrotating ring that can transfer data over two simultaneousroutes, the reliability of the collaborative network increasesdramatically—by over 2 nines if each node in the network as a two ninesreliability!

Detailed Embodiment Description Parameter Definitions, Equations andGlossary Network Parameters: Network parameters: Defaut Index # M_(NA) =Number of node addresses (active nodes) in the network Variable (1.1.01)M_(LA) = Number of link addresses (active links) in the network Variable(1.1.02) M_(PA) = Number of network-layer port addresses in the networkM_(NA)(M_(NA) − 1) (1.1.03) M_(RA) = Number of network-layer routeaddresses in the network Variable (1.1.04) Network addresses: Rangem_(NA) = Node address (NA) 1:M_(NA) (1.1.05) m_(TNA) = Transmit Nodeaddress (TNA) 1:M_(NA) (1.1.06) m_(RNA) = Receive Node address (RNA)1:M_(NA) (1.1.07) m_(SNA) = Source Node address (SNA) 1:M_(NA) (1.1.08)m_(DNA) = Destination Node address (DNA) 1:M_(NA) (1.1.09) m_(LA) = Linkaddress (LA) 1:M_(LA) (1.1.10) m_(RLA) = Return link address (RLA)1:M_(LA) (1.1.11) m_(PA) = Network-layer port address (PA) 1:M_(PA)(1.1.12) m_(RA) = Network-layer route address (PA) 1:M_(PA) (1.1.13)Network mappings: μ_(NA)(m_(LA)) = [m_(TNA) m_(RNA)] connected by linkm_(LA). Alternate notation μ_(TNA)(m_(LA)), (1.1.14) μ_(RNA)(m_(LA)) canalso be used to refer to individual elements of μ_(NA). TDD wubframeused by link m_(LA) (μ_(TNA)(m_(LA)) transmits over (1.1.15)μ_(TDD)(m_(LA)) = TDD subframe μ_(TDD)(m_(LA))) μ_(LA)(m_(TNA),m_(RNA))= Address of link connecting TNA m_(TNA) to RNA m_(RNA) (0 if no LA)(1.1.16) μ_(NA)(m_(LA)) = [m_(TNA) m_(RNA)]

 μ_(LA)(m_(RNA),m_(TNA)) = m_(LA) μ_(RLA)(m_(LA)) = Return link address(RLA) for link m_(LA): (1.1.17) μ_(NA)(m_(LA)) = [m_(TNA) m_(RNA)]

 μ_(NA)(μ_(RLA)(m_(LA))) = [m_(RNA) m_(TNA)] k_(TNA)(m_(frame)) = Adaptbin used by TNA m_(TNA) (same for all links emanating from (1.1.18)m_(TNA)) over frame m_(frame). Same for all links emanating fromm_(TNA). Datalink Parameters: Address-independent datalink parameters:Default N_(codec) = Maximum data encoding rate (can be noninteger) 8(1.2.01) N_(FHT) = Hadamard bins per frame 256 (1.2.02) N_(embed) =Hadamard bins reserved for adaptation (≦N_(FHT)) 16 (1.2.04) M_(embed) =Modulated bins per port (≦N_(embed)/N_(port)) 16 (1.2.05) N_(data) =Hadamard bins reserved for data (≦N_(FHT) − N_(embed)) 240 (1.2.03)M_(data) = Hadamard bins modulated by data (≦N_(data)) 240 (1.2.03a)N_(sub) = Subcarriers per OFDM symbol 64 (1.2.06) M_(sub) = Modulatedsubcarriers per OFDM symbol 52 (1.2.07) M_(QAM) = QAM data symbols perphysical data frame 12,480 (1.2.08) N_(OFDM) = OFDM symbols per physicaldata frame 312 (1.2.09) M_(OFDM) = Modulated OFDM symbols per PPDU 256(1.2.10) N_(TDD) = Data frames (TDD subframes) per TDD frame 2 (1.2.11)T_(FFT)(μs) = Duration of OFDM FFT in microseconds (μs)   3.2 μs(1.2.12) T_(symbol)(μs) = Duration of OFDM symbol in μs    4 μs (1.2.13)T_(prefix)(μs) = Duration of OFDM cyclic prefix (guard interval) in μs  0.8 μs (1.2.14) T_(PPDU)(μs) = Duration of data PPDU in μs  1,024 μs(1.2.15) T_(frame)(μs) = Duration of data frame in μs  1,250 μs (1.2.16)T_(TxRx)(μs) = Duration of TxRx turnaround time in μs    2 μs (1.2.17)T_(IFS)(μs) = Duration of interframe space (guard time interval) in  226 μs (1.2.18) μs, inclusive of T_(TxRx) T_(TDD)(μs) = Duration ofOFDM cyclic prefix (guard interval) μs  2,500 μs (1.2.19) f_(sub)(MHz) =Subcarriers spacing in MHz (OFDM LPHY)  0.3125 MHz (1.2.20)W_(active)(MHz) = Active bandwith of signal in MHz   16.25 MHz (1.2.21)Node-address dependent datalink parameters: Default N_(ant) = Antennasavailable at node Variable (1.2.22) M_(ant) = Antennas used at node(≦N_(ant)) Variable (1.2.23) N_(port) = Physical ports supportable atnode (≦N_(ant)) Variable (1.2.24) M_(port) = Physical ports used at node(≦N_(port)) Variable (1.2.25) Link-address dependent datalinkparameters: Default M_(codec) = Codec rate employed on link (0

 no data Variable (1.2.26) transported) M_(bit) = Bits/frame Tx″d overthe link (M_(bit) * M_(codec)), 0

Variable (1.2.27) none Node-address independent datalink indices: Rangen_(FHT) = Physical FHT input bin index 1:N_(FHT) (1.2.28) m_(FHT) =Logical FHT input bin index 1:M_(FHT) (1.2.29) m_(data) = Logical databin index 1:M_(data) (1.2.30) m_(embed) = Logical adaptation bin index1:M_(embed) (1.2.31) n_(sub) = Physical subcarrier index 1:N_(sub)(1.2.32) m_(sub) = Logical subcarrier index 1:M_(sub) (1.2.33) m_(QAM) =Logical QAM data index 1:M_(QAM) (1.2.34) n_(OFDM) = Physical OFDMsymbol index 1:N_(OFDM) (1.2.35) m_(OFDM) = Logical OFDM symbol index1:M_(OFDM) (1.2.36) n_(TDD) = TDD subframe index (TDD instantiations)1:N_(TDD) (1.2.37) n_(frame) = Data frame index (ignores TDD framing) —(1.2.38) Node-address dependent datalink indices: Range n_(ant) =Physical antenna index 1:N_(ant) (1.2.39) m_(ant) = Logical antennaindex 1:M_(ant) (1.2.40) n_(port) = Physical port index 1:N_(port)(1.2.41) m_(port) = Logical port index 1:M_(port) (1.2.42) m_(frame) =Logical frame index, shared by consecutive node ≧0 (1.2.43) receive andtransmit frames Link-address dependent datalink indices: Range m_(bit) =Logical data bit (codes input) index 1:M_(bit) (1.2.44) Datalinkmappings: v_(embed)(m_(embed)) = Physical Hadamard bin modulated bylogical transmit pilot bin m_(embed) (1.2.45) v_(data)(m_(data)) =Physical Hadamard bin modulated by logical data bin m_(data) (1.2.46)v_(sub)(m_(sub)) = Physical subcarrier modulated by logical subcarrierm_(sub) (1.2.47) f_(sub)(m_(sub)) = Physical baseband link frequency oflogical subcarrier m_(sub) (1.2.48) v_(frame)(m_(frame),m_(TDD)) =Physical frame carrying PPDU with frame index m_(frame), TDD (1.2.49)subframe index m_(frame). μ_(port)(m_(LA)) = Logical transmit or receiveport (as appropriate) providing data for (1.2.50) link address m_(LA).By convention, the same logical port is used on the return path,m_(port)(m_(LA)) = v_(port)(m_(RLA)), m_(RLA) = μ_(RLA)(m_(LA)).μ_(LA)(m_(port)) = LA serviced by port m_(port). Inverse ofμ_(port)(m_(LA)). (1.2.51) Data and Parameter Arrays: Transmit dataarrays: Dimensions B_(TNA)(m_(frame)) = Transmitted bits transmitted,frame m_(frame), M_(bit)xM_(port) (1.3.1) B_(TNA)(m_(frame)) =[b_(TNA)(1;m_(frame)) . . . b_(TNA)(M_(port;) m_(frame))],b_(TNA)(m_(port;) m_(frame)) = bits Tx'd from node m_(TNA) over portm_(port)  m_(port) = μ_(port)(m_(LA)), where μ_(TNA)(m_(LA)) = m_(TNA)Q_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = QAM data transmitted, subcarrier m_(sub),frame m_(frame), M_(data)xM_(port) (1.3.2)${Q_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = {\quad\begin{bmatrix}{q_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{q_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{data};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}}$ q_(TNA)(m_(data);m_(sub),m_(frame)) = QAM data Tx'd ondata bin m_(data) D_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = FHT input data,subcarrier m_(sub), frame m_(frame), M_(OFDM)xM_(port) (1.3.3)${D_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = \begin{bmatrix}{d_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{d_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{FHT};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}$ C_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = TRANSEC-scrambled FHT outputdata, subcarrier M_(OFDM)xM_(port) (1.3.4) m_(sub), frame m_(frame),${C_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = {\quad\begin{bmatrix}{c_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{c_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{OFDM};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}}$ S_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = OFDM modulator input data,subcarrier m_(sub), frame M_(OFDM)xM_(ant) (1.3.5) m_(frame),${S_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = {\quad\begin{bmatrix}{s_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{s_{TNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{OFDM};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}}$ Transmit parameter arrays: DimensionsR_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = RNA TRANSEC code, subcarrier m_(sub), framem_(frame); M_(OFDM)xM_(port) (1.3.6) row m_(port) = receive code fornode m_(RNA) = μ_(RNA)(μ_(LA) (m_(port)))r_(RNA)(m_(port);m_(sub),m_(frame)) =r(m_(sub),m_(frame);μ_(RNA)(μ_(LA)(m_(port)))),G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = TNA distribution weights, subcarrierm_(sub), frame m_(frame). M_(ant)xM_(port) (1.3.7) γ_(RLA)(m_(frame)) =Target return-link SINR's, frame m_(frame). 1xM_(port) (1.3.8)h_(Tx)(m_(sub)) = Transmit subcarrier mask (OFDM LPHY), M_(ant)x1(1.3.9)${h_{TX}\left( m_{sub} \right)} = {\left( \frac{{{\pi f}_{sub}\left( m_{sub} \right)}T_{DAC}}{\sin\left( {{{\pi f}_{sub}\left( m_{sub} \right)}T_{DAC}} \right)} \right){h_{TRC}\left( m_{sub} \right)}}$where T_(DAC) = 1/f_(DAC) is the (node-specific) DAC output sampleperiod. h_(TRC)(m_(sub)) = Transmit-receive compensation weights,equalizes M_(ant)x1 (1.3.10) path differences between the RF switch andthe DAC (transmit path) and ADC (receive path) at each node in thenetwork. Computed during scheduled Transmit/receive compensation events.Receive data arrays: Dimensions X_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = OFDM demodoutput data, subcarrier m_(sub), frame M_(OFDM)xM_(ant) (1.3.11)m_(frame). Y_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = TRANSEC-descrambled FHT outputdata, subcarrier M_(FHT)xM_(ant) (1.3.12) m_(sub), frame m_(frame).${Y_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = \begin{bmatrix}{y_{RNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{y_{RNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{OFDM};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}$ P_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = Deembeded pilot data,subcarrier m_(sub), frame m_(frame). M_(embed)xM_(ant) (1.3.13)${P_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = \begin{bmatrix}{P_{RNA}^{H}\left( {{1;m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{P_{RNA}^{H}\left( {{M_{{embed};}m_{sub}},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}$ Z_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = Deembeded QAM data,subcarrier m_(sub), frame m_(frame). M_(data)xM_(ant) (1.3.14)Q_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = Demodulated QAM data, subcarrier m_(sub),frame m_(frame). M_(data)xM_(port) (1.3.15) B_(RNA)(m_(frame)) = Decodedbits, frame m_(frame) M_(bit)xM_(port) (1.3.16) Receive parameterarrays: Dimensions r_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = NA TRANSEC code,subcarrier m_(sub), frame m_(frame). M_(OFDM)x1 (1.3.17) Used at nodem_(RNA) during receive operations, and at nodes attempting tocommunicate with node m_(RNA) during their transmit operations.W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) = Rx combiner weights, subcarrier m_(sub),frame m_(frame). M_(ant)xM_(port) (1.3.18) A_(Rx)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) =Rx spatial signature estimates, subcarrier m_(sub), frameM_(ant)xM_(port) (1.3.19) m_(frame). γ_(LA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) =Estimated link SINR's subcarrier m_(sub), frame m_(frame). 1xM_(port)(1.3.20) Conceptual parameter arrays (not generated, but referred to inoperations): Dimensions t_(TNA)(m_(frame)) = [Sparse] NA transmit pilot,subcarrier m_(sub),frame M_(embed)x1 (1.3.21) m_(frame).t_(TNA)(m_(frame)) = {square root over (M_(embed))}e(k_(TNA)(m_(frame))) C_(FHT) = Unitary Walsh transformation matrixM_(FHT)xM_(FHT) (1.3.22) S_(data) = Shift matrix, maps logical data binsto FHT input bins M_(FHT)xM_(data) (1.3.23) S_(pilot) = Shift matrix,maps logical pilot bins to FHT input bins M_(FHT)xM_(pilot) (1.3.24)S_(FHT) = Shift matrix, maps logical bins to physical FHT inputM_(FHT)xM_(FHT) (1.3.25) bins,  SFHT = [S_(pilot) S_(data)]Upper-PHY Signal Processing Operations:Transmit Operations

Starting with the transmit bits B_(TNA)(m_(frame)) to be transmittedover logical subcarrier m_(sub) and logical frame m_(frame), perform thefollowing operations.

-   Step TP1: Separately encode each row of transmitted bits    B_(TNA)(m_(frame)) into QAM symbols, and map to subcarriers to form    QAM transmit data Q_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)). The bit-to-QAM encoder    is not specified here. However, the default encoder will be    operations cited in the 802.11a standards specification.-   Step TP2: Embed the transmit pilot, and map pilot & data to FHT    input bins

$\begin{matrix}{{D_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)} = {S_{FHT}\begin{bmatrix}{{t_{TNA}\left( m_{frame} \right)}1_{M_{port}}^{T}} \\{Q_{TNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}}} & \left( {2.1{.1}} \right) \\\begin{matrix}{\mspace{205mu}{= {{S_{pilot}\left( {{t_{TNA}\left( m_{frame} \right)}1_{M_{port}}^{T}} \right)} +}}} \\{S_{data}{Q_{Tx}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}}\end{matrix} & \left( {2.1{.2}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step TP3: Embed receive pilot for RNA's communicating with the node.    C _(TNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=R _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))·*(C    _(FHT) D _(TNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame)))  (2.1.3)-   Step TP4: Distribute the embedded data over the output antennas.    S _(TNA)(m _(sub) ,M _(frame))=(1_(M) _(OFDM) h _(Tx) ^(T)(sub))·*(C    _(TNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))G _(TNA) ^(T)(m _(sub) ,m    _(frame))  (2.1.4)    where “.*” denotes the element-wise multiply operation, and 1_(M) is    the M×1 all-ones vector.

Two algorithms are specified here to adapt transmit distribution weights{G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}.

-   -   A retrodirective max-SINR approach that sets        {G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} proportional to the receive weights        that maximize signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) on        the return path, and    -   A retrodirective max-SIR approach that sets        {G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} proportional to the receive weights        that maximize signal-to-interference ratio (SIR), i.e., that        provide hard transmit nulls, on the return path.

The max-SIR approach is recommended for initialization of new links: themax-SINR approach is recommended for steady state operation andtracking. The max-SINK transmit weight adaptation algorithm is describedin Section 3.2. The max-SIR transmit weight adaptation algorithm isdescribed in Section 4.2.

Receive Processing Operations

Starting with the multiantenna data X_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) receivedand OFDM-demodulated over logical subcarrier m_(sub) and logical framem_(frame), perform the following operations.

-   Step RP1: Remove the receive pilot, and inverse-FHT descrambled data    Y _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=C _(FHT) ^(H)((r _(RNA)*(m _(sub) ,m    _(frame))1_(M) _(ant) _((m) _(RNA) ₎ ^(T))·*X _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m    _(frame)))  (2.2.1)-   Step RP2: Separate pilot & data components    P _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=S _(pilot) ^(T) Y _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m    _(frame))  (2.2.2)    X _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=S _(data) ^(T) Y _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m    _(frame))  (2.2.3)-   Steps RA, Detect transmit pilots and estimate their SINR's    γ_(LA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))(Sections 3.1, 4.1).    -   TA:        -   Compute combiner weights {W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}            (Sections 3.1, 4.1).        -   Compute distribution weights {G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} to            be used on the return path (Sections 3.2, 4.2).-   Step RP3: Recover the QAM link data:    Q _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=Z _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))W    _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))  (2.2.4)

Two algorithms are specified here to adapt receive combiner weights{W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))},

-   -   A retrodirective max-SINR approach that adapts        {W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} to maximize        signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) of the received        pilot data, and    -   A retrodirective max-SIR approach that adapts        {W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} to maximize signal-to-interference        ratio (SIR) of the received pilot data, i.e., that provide hard        receive nulls to separate the signals of interest to the node.

The max-SIR approach is recommended for initialization of new links: themax-SINR approach is recommended for steady state operation andtracking. The max-SINR transmit weight adaptation algorithm is describedin Section 3.2. The max-SIR transmit weight adaptation algorithm isdescribed in Section 4.2.

Max-SINR Adaptation Algorithm

Adaptive Receive Algorithm

Starting with the multiantenna received and deembedded pilot data(referred to as P_(RNA)(m_(sub)) or P_(RNA) as appropriate to simplifyarguments) received and OFDM-demodulated over logical subcarrier m_(sub)and logical frame m_(frame), perform the following operations

-   Step RA1: Compute QRD of P_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))

$\begin{matrix}{{\left\{ {{Q\left( m_{{sub}\;} \right)},{R\left( m_{sub} \right)}} \right\} = {{QRD}\left\{ {P_{RNA}\left( {m_{{sub},}m_{frame}} \right)} \right\}}},\mspace{11mu}{{such}{\mspace{11mu}\;}{that}}} & \left( {3.1{.1}} \right) \\{\left. {R\left( m_{sub} \right)} \right\} = {{chol}\left\{ {{P_{RNA}^{H}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}{P_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}} \right\}}} & \left( {3.1{.2}} \right) \\{{= \;{{chol}\left\{ {P_{RNA}^{H}{P_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}} \right\}}}} & \left( {3.1{.3}} \right) \\{{C\left( m_{sub} \right)} = {R^{- 1}\left( m_{sub} \right)}} & \left( {3.1{.4}} \right) \\{{{Q\left( m_{sub} \right)} = {{P_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}{C\left( m_{sub} \right)}}},\left( {{{Q^{H}\left( m_{sub} \right)}{Q\left( m_{sub} \right)}} = I_{M_{ant}}} \right)} & \left( {3.1{.5}} \right) \\{\mspace{79mu}{= \begin{bmatrix}{q^{H}\left( {1;m_{sub}} \right)} \\\vdots \\{q^{H}\left( {M_{embed};m_{sub}} \right)}\end{bmatrix}}} & \left( {3.1{.6}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step RA2: Detect candidate TN, transmit pilots and spatially    whitened adaptation weights

$\begin{matrix}{\left. {{{{\eta\left( {m_{{embed};}\; m_{sub}} \right)} =}}q_{{embed};}m_{sub}} \right)}^{2} & \left( {3.1{.7}} \right) \\{{\gamma\left( {m_{{embed};}m_{sub}} \right)} = \frac{\eta\left( {m_{{embed}\;};m_{sub}} \right)}{1 - {\eta\left( {m_{{embed}\;};m_{sub}} \right)}}} & \left( {3.1{.8}} \right) \\{{c_{\det}\left( m_{embed} \right)} = {\frac{1}{M_{sub}}{\sum\limits_{m_{sub} = 1}^{M_{sub}}\;{\log_{2}\left( {1 + {\gamma\left( {m_{{embed}\;};m_{sub}} \right)}} \right)}}}} & \left( {3.1{.9}} \right) \\{{\left\{ {m_{embed}(m)} \right\}\begin{matrix}M_{\det} \\{m = 1}\end{matrix}} = {{m_{embed}(m)}\mspace{20mu}{satisfying}\left\{ \begin{matrix}\begin{matrix}{{c_{\det}\left( {m_{embed}(m)} \right)} \geq} \\{c_{{thresh}\;},\mspace{14mu}{and}}\end{matrix} \\\begin{matrix}{{c_{\det}\left( {m_{embed}(m)} \right)} \geq} \\{c_{\det}\left( {m_{embed}\left( {m + 1} \right)} \right)}\end{matrix}\end{matrix} \right.}} & \left( {3.1{.10}} \right) \\{{U_{\det}\left( m_{sub} \right)} = {\sqrt{M_{embed}}\left\lbrack {{q\left( {{m_{embed}(1)};m_{sub}} \right)}\ldots\mspace{11mu}{q\left( {{m_{embed}\left( m_{\det} \right)};m_{sub}} \right)}} \right\rbrack}} & \left( {3.1{.11}} \right) \\{{\eta_{\det}\left( m_{sub} \right)} = \left\lbrack {{\eta\left( {{m_{embed}(1)};m_{sub}} \right)}\ldots\mspace{11mu}{\eta\left( {{m_{embed}\left( m_{\det} \right)};m_{sub}} \right)}} \right\rbrack} & \left( {3.1{.12}} \right) \\{{\gamma_{\det}\left( m_{sub} \right)} = \left\lbrack {{\gamma\left( {{m_{embed}(1)};m_{sub}} \right)}\ldots\mspace{11mu}{\gamma\left( {{m_{embed}\left( m_{\det} \right)};m_{sub}} \right)}} \right\rbrack} & \left( {3.1{.13}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step RA3: If spatial signature estimates A_(port)(m_(sub)) are    available, where A_(port)(m_(sub)) is the import column Of    A_(RNA)(m_(sub)) (see Step RA6), associate detected transmit pilots    with receive ports and link addresses.

$\begin{matrix}{{U_{port}\left( {m_{\det};m_{sub}} \right)} = {{C^{H}\left( m_{sub} \right)}{a_{port}\left( {m_{{port};}m_{sub}} \right)}}} & \left( {3.1{.14}} \right) \\{{\rho\left( {{m_{\det,}m_{port}};m_{sub}} \right)} = {\frac{{{{u_{\det}^{H}\left( {m_{\det};m_{sub}} \right)}{u_{port}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}}}^{2}}{{{{{M_{embed};{\eta_{\det}\left( {m_{\det};m_{sub}} \right)}}}{u_{port}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}}}^{2}} \leq 1}} & \left( {3.1{.15}} \right) \\{{c_{match}\left( {m_{\det},m_{port}} \right)} = {\frac{1}{M_{sub}}{\sum\limits_{m_{sub} = 1}^{M_{sub}}\;{\log_{2}\left( {1 + {{\gamma\left( {m_{\det};m_{sub}} \right)}{\rho\left( {m_{\det},{m_{port};m_{sub}}} \right)}}} \right)}}}} & \left( {3.1{.16}} \right) \\{\left\{ {m_{\det}\left( m_{port} \right)} \right\}_{m_{port} = 1}^{M_{port}}\; = {{{ar}g}\mspace{14mu}{\max\limits_{m_{\det}}\left\{ {c_{match}\left( {m_{\det};m_{port}} \right)} \right\}}}} & \left( {3.1{.17}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step RA4: Drop and add ports, based on e port matching statistic    c_(match)(m_(det),m_(port)).

$\begin{matrix}{\left\{ m_{drop} \right\}_{1}^{M_{drop}} = {\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max\limits_{m_{port}}\left\{ {{\max\limits_{m_{\det}}\left\{ {c_{match}\left( {m_{\det};m_{port}} \right)} \right\}} < c_{thresh}} \right\}}}} & \left( {3.1{.18}} \right) \\{\left\{ m_{add} \right\}_{1}^{M_{add}} = {m_{\det} \notin \left\{ {m_{\det}\left( m_{port} \right)} \right\}_{m_{port} = 1}^{M_{port}}}} & \left( {3.1{.19}} \right) \\\left. M_{port}\leftarrow{M_{port} - M_{drop} + M_{add}} \right. & \left( {3.1{.20}} \right) \\\left. \left\{ {m_{\det}\left( m_{port} \right)} \right\}_{m_{port} = 1}^{M_{port}}\leftarrow{\left( {\left\{ {m_{\det}\left( m_{port} \right)} \right\}\backslash\left\{ {m_{\det}\left( m_{drop} \right)} \right\}} \right)\bigcup\left\{ m_{add} \right\}} \right. & \left( {3.1{.21}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step RA5: Assign receive ports and link statistics    η_(LA)(m _(port) ;m _(sub))=η_(det)(m _(det)(m _(port));m    _(sub))  (3.1.22)    γ_(LA)(m _(port) ;m _(sub))=γ_(det)(m _(det)(m _(port));m    _(sub))  (3.1.23)    u(m _(port) ;m _(sub))=u _(det)(m _(det)(m _(port));m    _(sub))  (3.1.24)    U(m _(sub))=[u(1;m _(sub)) . . . u(M _(port) ;m _(sub))]  (3.1.25)-   Step RA6: Estimate spatial steering matrices    {A_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}.    A _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=C ^(H)(m _(sub))U(m _(sub))  (3.1.26)-   Step RA7: Compute combiner weights {W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}.    W _(RNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=C(m _(sub))U(m _(sub))  (3.1.27)    Adaptive Transmit Algorithm

Starting with the receive weights W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) given in(3.1.27) and target SINR's γ_(RLA) for the return link, perform thefollowing operations.

-   Step TA1: Scale whitened transmit weights,

$\begin{matrix}{{{\eta_{RLA}\left( m_{port} \right)} = \frac{\gamma_{RLA}\left( m_{RLA} \right)}{1 + {\gamma_{RLA}\left( m_{RLA} \right)}}},{m_{port} = {{\mu_{port}\left( m_{RLA} \right)} = {\mu_{port}\left( m_{RLA} \right)}}}} & \left( {3.2{.1}} \right) \\{\left. {\pi_{RLA}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}\rightarrow\frac{\eta_{RLA}\left( m_{port} \right)}{\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)} \right.,\left( {{\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}\mspace{14mu}{given}\mspace{14mu}{in}\mspace{11mu}\left( {3.1{.22}} \right)} \right.} & \left( {3.2{.2}} \right)\end{matrix}$

-   Step TA2: Compute distribution weights {G_(TNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}.    G _(TNA)(m _(sub) ,m _(frame))=[√{square root over (π(1,m _(sub)))}w    _(RNA)(1,m _(sub)) . . . √{square root over (π(M _(port) ,m    _(sub)))}w _(RNA)(M _(port) ,m _(sub))]  (3.2.3)

The target SINR's can also be derived from rate targets based onperformance of the codecs used in the system, or from capacity targets{C_(RLA)(m_(RLA))} or spectral efficiency targets {c_(RLA)(m_(RLA))},via the formulac _(RLA)(m _(RLA))=1.63C _(RLA)(m _(RLA))/W _(active)  (3.2.4)γ_(RLA)=(m _(RLA))=λ_(gap)(2^(C) ^(RLA) ^((m) ^(RLA) ⁾−1)c _(RLA)(m_(RLA))  (3.2.5)

Where 1.63=1/0.6144 is the inverse efficiency of the airlink, whichincludes overhead for transmit pilots (0.9375 efficiency), the OFDMcyclic prefix (0.80 efficiency) and TDD framing (0.8192 efficiency), andwhere λ_(gap) is the SNR coding gap of the QAM codec. Target SINR, rate,or capacity can be set at either end of the link, i.e., as a transmitterdesign goal or as a control parameter passed from the link or network.In the first two cases, this adaptation is referred to here as locallyenabled network optimization (LEGO).

Note that steps (3.2.1)-(3.2.3) adjust output power to meet a link SINR(or link rate or capacity) criterion. That is, the system will attemptto adjust transmit power at each node to meet this criterion. Also notethat steps (3.2.1)-(3.2.3) require no information from other links inthe network, including links originating from the same node. While thiscan be a highly desirable attribute in many applications, it has somedrawbacks in practice. In particular, if the target SINR's are set toohigh, the resultant network can fail to converge and drive itstransmitters into saturation. This event can be detected by computingthe conducted power into each antenna,

$\begin{matrix}{{P_{RLA}\left( m_{ant} \right)} = {M_{sub}{\sum\limits_{m_{port} = 1}^{M_{port}}\;{{g\left( {m_{ant},m_{port}} \right.}^{2}}}}} & \left( {3.2{.6}} \right)\end{matrix}$and monitoring P_(RLA)(m_(ant)) to ensure compliance with conductedpower requirements.

In addition, the convergence time of the LEGO algorithm can be slow,especially during initial acquisition of multiple links. Thisperformance can be improved by employing a max-SIR algorithm that formshard nulls during the initial link acquisition period. This algorithm iseasily implemented as an extension of the max-SINR algorithm describedabove.

Max-SIR Adaptation Algorithm

Adaptive Receive Algorithm

Starting with the multiantenna received and deembedded pilot dataX_(Px)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) (referred to as X_(Px)(m_(sub)) or X_(Px) asappropriate to simplify arguments) received and OFDM-demodulated overlogical subcarrier m_(sub) and logical frame m_(frame), perform thefollowing operations.

-   Step RA1: Compute QRD of P_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)), using    (3.1.1)-(3.1.6).-   Step RA2: Detect candidate TNA transmit pilots and    spatially-whitened max-SINR adaptation weights using    (3.1.7)-(3.1.13).-   Step RA3: If spatial signature estimates A_(RNA)(m_(sub)) are    available (see Step RA7), associate detected transmit pilots with    receive ports and link addresses, using (3.1.14)-(3.1.17).-   Step RA4: Drop and add ports using (3.1.18)-(3.1.21)-   Step RA5: Assign max-SINR whitened transmit/receive weights and link    statistics using (3.1.22)-(3.1.25).-   Step RA6: Estimate spatial steering matrices    {A_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))} using 3.1.26.-   Step RA7: Compute combiner weights {W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))},    using (3.1.27).-   Step RA7.1: Compute dull-steering receive weights at d SINR's

$\begin{matrix}{{C_{\bot}\left( m_{sub} \right)} = \left( {{U^{H}\left( m_{sub} \right)}{U\left( m_{sub} \right)}} \right)^{- 1}} & \left( {4.1{.1}} \right) \\\left. {\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{posrt},m_{sub}} \right)}\leftarrow{{1/{diag}}\left\{ {C_{\bot}\left( m_{sub} \right)} \right\}\left( {{replaces}\mspace{14mu}{\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{posrt},m_{sub}} \right)}\mspace{14mu}{provided}\mspace{14mu}{by}\mspace{11mu}\left( {3.1{.22}} \right)} \right)} \right. & \left( {4.1{.2}} \right) \\\left. {\gamma_{LA}\left( {m_{posrt},m_{sub}} \right)}\leftarrow{\frac{\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}{1 - {\eta_{LA}\left( {m_{port};m_{sub}} \right)}}\left( {{{replace}s}\mspace{14mu}{\gamma_{LA}\left( {m_{port},m_{sub}} \right)}\mspace{14mu}{{provide}d}\mspace{14mu}{by}\mspace{11mu}\left( {3.1{.22}} \right)} \right)} \right. & \left( {4.1{.3}} \right) \\\left. {W_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{frame}} \right)}\leftarrow{{W_{RNA}\left( {m_{sub},m_{sub}} \right)}{C_{\bot}\left( m_{sub} \right)}} \right. & \left( {4.1{.4}} \right)\end{matrix}$Adaptive Transmit Algorithm

Starting with the transmit weights W_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame)) given in(4.1.4) and target SINR's γ_(RLA) for the return link, perform thefollowing operations.

-   Step TA1: Compute η_(RLA)(m_(port)) using (3.2.1).-   Step TA1.1: Compute power scaling π(m_(port);m_(sub)) using    π(m _(port) ;m _(sub))=η_(RLA)(m _(port))η_(LA)(m _(port) ;m    _(sub)),(η_(LA)(m _(port) ;m _(sub)) given in (3.1.22))  (4.2.1)-   Step TA2: Compute combiner weights {G_(RNA)(m_(sub),m_(frame))}    using 3.2.3

The target SINR's can also be derived from rate targets based onperformance of the codec's used in the system, or from capacity targets{C_(RLA)(m_(RLA))} or spectral efficiency targets {c_(RLA)(m_(RLA))},using (3.2.4)-(3.2.5), and conducted power can be monitored using(3.2.6). In addition, the SINR and SIR estimates given by (3.1.23 and(4.1.3) can be used to detect “overloaded network” conditions where themax-SIR solution is misadjusting significantly from the max-SINR result,

While this invention has been described with reference to one or moreillustrative embodiments, this description is not to be construed in alimiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of theillustrative embodiments, differing order of the sub-steps (includingparallel and partial processing for one or more operations thereof), aswell as other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to thoseskilled in the art upon referencing this disclosure. It is thereforeintended this disclosure encompass any combination of the specificsdescribed here and such modifications or embodiments. Furthermore, thescope of this invention includes any combination of the subordinateparts from the different embodiments disclosed in this specification,and is not limited to the specifics of the preferred embodiment or anyof the alternative embodiments mentioned above. Individualconfigurations and embodiments of this invention may contain all, orless than all, of those disclosed in the specification according to theneeds and desires of that user. The claims stated herein should furtherbe read as including those elements which are not necessary to theinvention yet are in the prior art, particularly that referenced andincorporated herein thereby, and are necessary to the overall functionof that particular claim, and should be read as including, to themaximum extent permissible by law, known functional equivalents to thespecification's disclosure, even though those functional equivalents arenot exhaustively detailed herein or individually claimed below due tothe legal preferences for limiting the number of claims and the law'sintent to negate any requirement for combinatorial explosion foroverly-detailed description and claiming of known and foreseeablealternatives.

Although the present invention has been described chiefly in terms ofthe presently preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that thedisclosure is not to be interpreted as limiting. Various alterations andmodifications will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the artafter having read the above disclosure. Such modifications may involveother features which are already known in the design, manufacture anduse of adaptive and transitional systems, both hardware and associatedsoftware therefore, and which may be used instead of or in addition tofeatures already described herein. The examples herein are not limitingbut instructive of the embodiment of the invention, and variations whichare readily derived through programming or embedded hardwaretransformations which are standard or known to the appropriate art arenot excluded by omission. Accordingly, it is intended that the appendedclaims are interpreted as covering all alterations and modifications asfall within the true spirit and scope of the invention in light of theprior art.

Additionally, although claims have been formulated in this applicationto particular combinations of elements, it should be understood that thescope of the disclosure of the present application also includes anysingle novel element or any novel combination of elements disclosedherein, either explicitly, or implicitly, whether or not it relates tothe same invention as presently claimed in any claim and whether or notit mitigates any or all of the same technical problems as does thepresent invention. The applicants hereby give notice that new claims maybe formulated to such features and/or combinations of such featuresduring the prosecution of the present application or of any furtherapplication derived there from.

The invention claimed is:
 1. A method comprising: receiving, by a firstnode, a first transmission from a second node; determining, based atleast in part on the first transmission, a plurality of transmissionlevels, respectively, for a plurality of time-frequency channels;generating a signal that comprises an originator-based firstpseudorandom sequence; and transmitting the signal, via the plurality oftime-frequency channels and using the plurality of transmission levels,as at least part of an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)second transmission via one or more antennas of a plurality of antennasof the first node.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the signalcomprises the originator-based first pseudorandom sequence modified byan originating node index overlay and a recipient-based secondpseudorandom sequence.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the generatingthe signal comprises generating the signal to further comprise user dataand a recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.
 4. The method ofclaim 1, wherein a first portion of the OFDM second transmissioncomprises a first portion of the signal modified by user data associatedwith the second node, and wherein a second portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a second portion of the signal that is notmodified by the user data.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein thegenerating the signal comprises generating the signal to furthercomprise a complex sinusoid that identifies an originator of the OFDMsecond transmission.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the generatingthe signal comprises generating the signal to comprise: theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, wherein theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies an originatinggroup, associated with the OFDM second transmission, that comprises thefirst node; a second pseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipientof the OFDM second transmission; and a complex sinusoid that identifiesan originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 7. The method of claim 1,wherein the signal comprises a pilot signal.
 8. The method of claim 1,wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting the OFDM secondtransmission to multiple recipients using a multiple access scheme. 9.The method of claim 1, wherein the OFDM second transmission comprises atime series of OFDM symbols, the method further comprising inserting thesignal into a first plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols anduser data into a second plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols.10. The method of claim 1, wherein the generating the signal comprisesgenerating the signal to further comprise a complex signal componentthat identifies an originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 11. Themethod of claim 1, wherein the generating the signal comprisesgenerating the signal to comprise: the originator-based firstpseudorandom sequence, wherein the originator-based first pseudorandomsequence identifies an originating group, associated with the OFDMsecond transmission, that comprises the first node; a secondpseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipient of the OFDM secondtransmission; and a complex signal component that identifies anoriginator of the OFDM second transmission.
 12. A first node comprising:a plurality of antennas; and circuitry configured to: receive a firsttransmission from a second node; determine, based at least in part onthe first transmission, a plurality of transmission levels,respectively, for a plurality of tones; generate a signal that comprisesan originator-based first pseudorandom sequence modified by anoriginating node index overlay and a recipient-based second pseudorandomsequence; and cause transmission of the signal, using the plurality oftones and the plurality of transmission levels, as at least part of anorthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) second transmissionvia one or more antennas of the plurality of antennas.
 13. The firstnode of claim 12, wherein a first portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a first portion of the signal modified by userdata associated with the second node, and wherein a second portion ofthe OFDM second transmission comprises a second portion of the signalthat is not modified by the user data.
 14. The first node of claim 12,wherein the originator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies anoriginating group, associated with the OFDM second transmission, thatcomprises the first node.
 15. The first node of claim 12, wherein thesignal comprises a pilot signal.
 16. The first node of claim 12, whereinthe circuitry is configured to cause the signal to be transmitted as atleast part of the OFDM second transmission to multiple recipients usinga multiple access scheme.
 17. The first node of claim 12, wherein theOFDM second transmission comprises a time series of OFDM symbols, andwherein the circuitry is further configured to insert the signal into afirst plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols and user data into asecond plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols.
 18. A methodcomprising: receiving, by a first node, a first transmission from asecond node; determining, based at least in part on the firsttransmission, a plurality of transmission levels, respectively, for aplurality of tones; generating a signal that comprises anoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence and that comprises acomplex sinusoid that identifies an originator of an orthogonalfrequency division multiplexing (OFDM) second transmission; andtransmitting the signal, using the plurality of tones and the pluralityof transmission levels, as at least part of the OFDM second transmissionvia one or more antennas of a plurality of antennas of the first node.19. The method of claim 18, wherein the generating the signal comprisesgenerating the signal to further comprise user data.
 20. The method ofclaim 18, wherein a first portion of the OFDM second transmissioncomprises a first portion of the signal modified by user data associatedwith the second node, and wherein a second portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a second portion of the signal that is notmodified by the user data.
 21. The method of claim 18, wherein thegenerating the signal comprises generating the signal to furthercomprise user data and a recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.22. The method of claim 18, wherein a first portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a first portion of the signal modified by userdata associated with the second node, and wherein a second portion ofthe OFDM second transmission comprises a second portion of the signalthat is not modified by the user data.
 23. The method of claim 18,wherein the generating the signal comprises generating the signal tocomprise: the originator-based first pseudorandom sequence, wherein theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies an originatinggroup, associated with the OFDM second transmission, that comprises thefirst node; a second pseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipientof the OFDM second transmission; and the complex sinusoid thatidentifies the originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 24. Themethod of claim 18, wherein the OFDM second transmission comprises atime series of OFDM symbols, the method further comprising inserting thesignal into a first plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols anduser data into a second plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols.25. The method of claim 18, wherein the signal comprises a pilot signal.26. The method of claim 18, wherein the transmitting comprisestransmitting the OFDM second transmission to multiple recipients using amultiple access scheme.
 27. A first node comprising: a plurality ofantennas; and circuitry configured to: receive a first transmission froma second node; determine, based at least in part on the firsttransmission, a plurality of transmission levels, respectively, for aplurality of tones; generate a signal that comprises: anoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, wherein theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies an originatinggroup, associated with an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing(OFDM) second transmission, that comprises the first node; a secondpseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipient of the OFDM secondtransmission; and a complex sinusoid that identifies an originator ofthe OFDM second transmission; and cause transmission of the signal,using the plurality of tones and the plurality of transmission levels,as at least part of the OFDM second transmission via one or moreantennas of the plurality of antennas.
 28. The first node of claim 27,wherein a first portion of the OFDM second transmission comprises afirst portion of the signal modified by user data associated with thesecond node, and wherein a second portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a second portion of the signal that is notmodified by the user data.
 29. The first node of claim 27, wherein thesignal comprises a pilot signal.
 30. The first node of claim 27, whereinthe circuitry is configured to cause the signal to be transmitted as atleast part of the OFDM second transmission to multiple recipients usinga multiple access scheme.
 31. A method comprising: receiving, by a firstnode, a first transmission from a second node; determining, based atleast in part on the first transmission, a plurality of transmissionlevels, respectively, for a plurality of tones; generating a signal thatcomprises an originator-based first pseudorandom sequence; inserting thesignal into a first plurality of a time series of orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing (OFDM) symbols of an OFDM second transmission anduser data into a second plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols ofthe OFDM second transmission; and transmitting the signal, using theplurality of tones and the plurality of transmission levels, as at leastpart of the OFDM second transmission via one or more antennas of aplurality of antennas of the first node.
 32. The first node of claim 27,wherein the OFDM second transmission comprises a time series of OFDMsymbols, and wherein the circuitry is further configured to insert thesignal into a first plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols anduser data into a second plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols.33. The method of claim 31, wherein the signal further comprises anoriginating node index overlay and a recipient-based second pseudorandomsequence.
 34. The method of claim 31, wherein the generating the signalcomprises generating the signal to further comprise a recipient-basedsecond pseudorandom sequence.
 35. The method of claim 31, wherein thegenerating the signal comprises generating the signal to furthercomprise a complex signal component that identifies an originator of theOFDM second transmission.
 36. The method of claim 31, wherein thegenerating the signal comprises generating the signal to comprise: theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, wherein theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies an originatinggroup, associated with the OFDM second transmission, that comprises thefirst node; a second pseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipientof the OFDM second transmission; and a complex signal component thatidentifies an originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 37. The methodof claim 31, wherein the signal comprises a pilot signal.
 38. The methodof claim 31, wherein the transmitting comprises transmitting the OFDMsecond transmission to multiple recipients using a multiple accessscheme.
 39. A first node comprising: a plurality of antennas; andcircuitry configured to: determine, based at least in part on a firsttransmission received from a second node, a plurality of transmissionlevels, respectively, for a plurality of time-frequency channels; andcause a signal, comprising an originator-based first pseudorandomsequence, to be transmitted via the plurality of time-frequency channelsand using the plurality of transmission levels, as at least part of anorthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) second transmissionvia one or more antennas of the plurality of antennas.
 40. The firstnode of claim 39, wherein the signal comprises the originator-basedfirst pseudorandom sequence modified by an originating node indexoverlay and a recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.
 41. Thefirst node of claim 39, wherein the circuitry is configured to generatethe signal to further comprise user data and a recipient-based secondpseudorandom sequence.
 42. The first node of claim 39, wherein a firstportion of the OFDM second transmission comprises a first portion of thesignal modified by user data associated with the second node, andwherein a second portion of the OFDM second transmission comprises asecond portion of the signal that is not modified by the user data. 43.The first node of claim 39, wherein the circuitry is configured togenerate the signal to comprise: the originator-based first pseudorandomsequence, wherein the originator-based first pseudorandom sequenceidentifies an originating group, associated with the OFDM secondtransmission, that comprises the first node; a second pseudorandomsequence that identifies a recipient of the OFDM second transmission;and a complex sinusoid that identifies an originator of the OFDM secondtransmission.
 44. The first node of claim 39, wherein the signalcomprises a pilot signal.
 45. The first node of claim 39, wherein thecircuitry is configured to cause the OFDM second transmission to betransmitted to multiple recipients using a multiple access scheme. 46.The first node of claim 39, wherein the OFDM second transmissioncomprises a time series of OFDM symbols, and wherein the circuitry isfurther configured to insert the signal into a first plurality of thetime series of OFDM symbols and user data into a second plurality of thetime series of OFDM symbols.
 47. The first node of claim 39, wherein thecircuitry comprises a processor.
 48. The first node of claim 39, whereinthe circuitry is configured to generate the signal to further comprise acomplex signal component that identifies an originator of the OFDMsecond transmission.
 49. The first node of claim 39, wherein thecircuitry is configured to generate the signal to comprise: theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, wherein theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence identifies an originatinggroup, associated with the OFDM second transmission, that comprises thefirst node; a second pseudorandom sequence that identifies a recipientof the OFDM second transmission; and a complex signal component thatidentifies an originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 50. A systemcomprising: a first node comprising: a plurality of antennas; and firstcircuitry configured to: determine, based at least in part on a firsttransmission received from a second node, a plurality of transmissionlevels, respectively, for a plurality of time-frequency channels; andcause a signal, comprising an originator-based first pseudorandomsequence and a recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence, to betransmitted via the plurality of time-frequency channels and using theplurality of transmission levels, as at least part of an orthogonalfrequency division multiplexing (OFDM) second transmission via one ormore antennas of the plurality of antennas; and a second nodecomprising: at least one antenna; and second circuitry configured todetermine whether to process the OFDM second transmission, received viathe at least one antenna of the second node, based at least in part onthe recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.
 51. The system ofclaim 50, wherein the first circuitry comprises a first processor andthe second circuitry comprises a second processor.
 52. The system ofclaim 50, wherein the first circuitry is configured to generate thesignal to comprise: user data; the originator-based first pseudorandomsequence, wherein the originator-based first pseudorandom sequenceidentifies an originating group, associated with the OFDM secondtransmission, that comprises the first node; the recipient-based secondpseudorandom sequence, wherein the recipient-based second pseudorandomsequence identifies a recipient of the OFDM second transmission; and acomplex sinusoid that identifies an originator of the OFDM secondtransmission.
 53. The system of claim 50, wherein the first nodecomprises a base station and the second node comprises a mobile device.54. The system of claim 50, wherein the first circuitry is configured togenerate the signal to further comprise a complex signal component thatidentifies an originator of the OFDM second transmission.
 55. The systemof claim 50, wherein the first circuitry is configured to generate thesignal to comprise: user data; the originator-based first pseudorandomsequence, wherein the originator-based first pseudorandom sequenceidentifies an originating group, associated with the OFDM secondtransmission, that comprises the first node; the recipient-based secondpseudorandom sequence, wherein the recipient-based second pseudorandomsequence identifies a recipient of the OFDM second transmission; and acomplex signal component that identifies an originator of the OFDMsecond transmission.
 56. A system comprising: a first node comprising: aplurality of antennas; and first circuitry configured to: determine,based at least in part on a first transmission received from a secondnode, a plurality of transmission levels, respectively, for a pluralityof time-frequency channels; and cause a signal, comprising anoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, to be transmitted via theplurality of time-frequency channels and using the plurality oftransmission levels, as at least part of an orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing (OFDM) second transmission via one or moreantennas of the plurality of antennas; and a second node comprising: atleast one antenna; and second circuitry configured to process the OFDMsecond transmission received via the at least one antenna of the secondnode.
 57. The system of claim 56, wherein the signal comprises theoriginator-based first pseudorandom sequence, an originating node indexoverlay, and a recipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.
 58. Thesystem of claim 56, wherein the signal further comprises user data and arecipient-based second pseudorandom sequence.
 59. The system of claim56, wherein a first portion of the OFDM second transmission comprises afirst portion of the signal modified by user data associated with thesecond node, and wherein a second portion of the OFDM secondtransmission comprises a second portion of the signal that is notmodified by the user data.
 60. The system of claim 56, wherein thesignal further comprises a complex signal component that identifies anoriginator of the OFDM second transmission.
 61. The system of claim 56,wherein the signal comprises: the originator-based first pseudorandomsequence, wherein the originator-based first pseudorandom sequenceidentifies an originating group, associated with the OFDM secondtransmission, that comprises the first node; a second pseudorandomsequence that identifies a recipient of the OFDM second transmission;and a complex signal component that identifies an originator of the OFDMsecond transmission.
 62. The system of claim 56, wherein the signalcomprises a pilot signal.
 63. The system of claim 56, wherein the firstcircuitry is configured to cause the signal to be transmitted as atleast part of the OFDM second transmission to multiple recipients usinga multiple access scheme.
 64. The system of claim 56, wherein the OFDMsecond transmission comprises a time series of OFDM symbols, and whereinthe first circuitry is further configured to insert the signal into afirst plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols and user data into asecond plurality of the time series of OFDM symbols.
 65. The system ofclaim 56, wherein the first node comprises a base station and the secondnode comprises a mobile terminal.